Abstract

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a strong greenhouse gas and causal for stratospheric ozone depletion. During biological nitrogen removal in wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), high N2O fluxes to the atmosphere can occur, typically exhibiting a seasonal emission pattern. Attempts to explain the peak emission phases in winter and spring using physico-chemical process data from WWTP were so far unsuccessful and new approaches are required. The complex and diverse microbial community of activated sludge used in biological treatment systems also exhibit substantial seasonal patterns. However, a potentially causal link between the seasonal patterns of microbial diversity and N2O emissions has not yet been investigated. Here we show that in a full-scale WWTP nitrification failure and N2O peak emissions, bad settleability of the activated sludge and a turbid effluent strongly correlate with a significant reduction in the microbial community diversity and shifts in community composition. During episodes of impaired performance, we observed a significant reduction in abundance for filamentous and nitrite oxidizing bacteria in all affected reactors. In some reactors that did not exhibit nitrification and settling failures, we observed a stable microbial community and no drastic loss of species. Standard engineering approaches to stabilize nitrification, such as increasing the aerobic sludge age and oxygen availability failed to improve the plant performance on this particular WWTP and replacing the activated sludge was the only measure applied by the operators to recover treatment performance in affected reactors. Our results demonstrate that disturbances of the sludge microbiome affect key structural and functional microbial groups, which lead to seasonal N2O emission patterns. To reduce N2O emissions from WWTP, it is therefore crucial to understand the drivers that lead to the microbial population dynamics in the activated sludge.

Highlights

  • Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the third most important greenhouse gas (GHG), contributing roughly 8% to the globally emitted GHG potential of anthropogenic origin (IPCC, 2013)

  • Our results demonstrate that disturbances of the sludge microbiome affect key structural and functional microbial groups, which lead to seasonal N2O emission patterns

  • During our N2O monitoring campaign at Uster wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), the biological treatment went through two extended periods of severe nitrification and settling failure leading to high NO2− concentrations and turbidity in the effluent

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the third most important greenhouse gas (GHG), contributing roughly 8% to the globally emitted GHG potential of anthropogenic origin (IPCC, 2013). It is considered the dominant ozone depleting substance in the stratosphere (Ravishankara et al, 2009). Biological nitrogen removal during wastewater treatment can cause high N2O fluxes to the atmosphere with a significant contribution to global N2O emissions (Vasilaki et al, 2019). In wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), emissions ranging from very low amounts up to a few percent of the total nitrogen load were shown to exhibit a strong seasonal pattern (Gruber et al, 2020). The abiotic reactions are of minor importance in biological nitrogen removal systems (Su et al, 2019)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call