Abstract

The granular sludge process is an effective, low-footprint alternative to conventional activated sludge wastewater treatment. The architecture of the microbial granules allows the co-existence of different functional groups, e.g., nitrifying and denitrifying communities, which permits compact reactor design. However, little is known about the factors influencing community assembly in granular sludge, such as the effects of reactor operation strategies and influent wastewater composition. Here, we analyze the development of the microbiomes in parallel laboratory-scale anoxic/aerobic granular sludge reactors operated at low (0.9 kg m-3d-1), moderate (1.9 kg m-3d-1) and high (3.7 kg m-3d-1) organic loading rates (OLRs) and the same ammonium loading rate (0.2 kg NH4-N m-3d-1) for 84 days. Complete removal of organic carbon and ammonium was achieved in all three reactors after start-up, while the nitrogen removal (denitrification) efficiency increased with the OLR: 0% at low, 38% at moderate, and 66% at high loading rate. The bacterial communities at different loading rates diverged rapidly after start-up and showed less than 50% similarity after 6 days, and below 40% similarity after 84 days. The three reactor microbiomes were dominated by different genera (mainly Meganema, Thauera, Paracoccus, and Zoogloea), but these genera have similar ecosystem functions of EPS production, denitrification and polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) storage. Many less abundant but persistent taxa were also detected within these functional groups. The bacterial communities were functionally redundant irrespective of the loading rate applied. At steady-state reactor operation, the identity of the core community members was rather stable, but their relative abundances changed considerably over time. Furthermore, nitrifying bacteria were low in relative abundance and diversity in all reactors, despite their large contribution to nitrogen turnover. The results suggest that the OLR has considerable impact on the composition of the granular sludge communities, but also that the granule communities can be dynamic even at steady-state reactor operation due to high functional redundancy of several key guilds. Knowledge about microbial diversity with specific functional guilds under different operating conditions can be important for engineers to predict the stability of reactor functions during the start-up and continued reactor operation.

Highlights

  • The aerobic granular sludge process is an emerging technology for the treatment of domestic as well as industrial wastewater streams (Khan et al, 2013)

  • Our aim was to study the impact of organic loading rate (OLR) on the development of the microbiomes in reactors operated for chemical oxygen demand (COD) and nitrogen removal

  • Many denitrifying bacteria can produce PHA, and our results suggest that the operating conditions in R3 may have favored PHA production over denitrification

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The aerobic granular sludge process is an emerging technology for the treatment of domestic as well as industrial wastewater streams (Khan et al, 2013). Urbanization results in increasing pollutant loads and often limited availability to expand existing treatment plants, which makes this effective, low-footprint process an attractive alternative (Khan et al, 2013). The dense structure of the granular sludge creates substrate gradients in the granule, which in turn results in different niches for different functional groups (Winkler et al, 2013). Studies have shown that aerobic and anaerobic metabolic activities can co-exist in granules, like the simultaneous removal of organic compounds, nitrogen and phosphorus (de Kreuk et al, 2005; Li et al, 2014), simultaneous nitrification and denitrification (Third et al, 2003; Yang et al, 2003), or simultaneous nitritation and anammox (Nielsen et al, 2005; Vlaeminck et al, 2010)

Objectives
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