Abstract

This work assessed the effect of increasing microaeration flow rates (1–6 mL min−1 at 28 °C and 1 atm, equivalent to 0.025–0.152 L O2 L−1 feed) on the removal/biotransformation of seven organic micropollutants (OMPs) (three hormones, one xenoestrogen, and three pharmaceuticals), at 200 μg L−1 each, in a lab-scale upflow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor operated at a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 7.4 h. Additionally, the operational stability of the system and the evolution of its microbial community under microaerobic conditions were evaluated. Microaeration was demonstrated to be an effective strategy to improve the limited removal/biotransformation of the evaluated OMPs in short-HRT anaerobic wastewater treatment systems. The rise in the airflow rate considerably increased the removal efficiencies of all OMPs. However, there seems to be a saturation limit for the biochemical reactions. Then, the best results were obtained with 4 mL air min−1 (0.101 L O2 L−1 feed) (~90%) because, above this flow rate, the efficiency increase was negligible. The long-term exposure to microaerobic conditions (249 days) led the microbiota to a gradual evolution. Consequently, there was some enrichment with species potentially associated with the biotransformation of OMPs, which may explain the better performance at the end of the microaerobic term even with the lowest airflow rate tested.

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