Abstract

The difficulties of management were the key barriers to the promotion of decentralized wastewater treatment in remote areas. In this study, a novel decentralized Circulating Oxygenation Biofilm Equipment (COBE) and its remote management potential based on mathematical modeling were investigated. The COBE is an integrated biofilm reactor that employs drippage aeration and enables oxygenation, filtration, and effluent processes to be controlled, thus providing convenience for controlling. The model for the COBE describing drippage aeration, comprehensive ammonia-related microbes, and corncob carbon source release process was studied to uncover the impacts of operational conditions on decentralized wastewater treatment in the COBE system. The equipment regulation parameter (circulating oxygenation ratio) was found to be linearly correlated with the oxygen mass transfer coefficient. This discovery enabled highly accurate prediction of COD, NH4–N, and TN concentrations in the equipment effluent at various scenarios. The comprehensive ammonia oxidation biological model indicated that the model could duplicate the actual situation of the succession of ammonia metabolizing related microorganisms. Comammox and ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) dominated ammonia metabolism in this equipment rather than conventional ammonium-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). This study could contribute to the Internet of Things system construction of decentralized wastewater treatment equipment, and provide a solution for timely decentralized equipment management in remote areas.

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