Abstract

Owing to the low ratio of chemical oxygen demand to total nitrogen (SCOD/TN), effective removal of nutrient pollutants from black water is difficult. In this study, to enhance nitrogen and phosphorus removal from such wastewater, a series of operational modification strategies was investigated and applied to a plant-scale semi-centralized system used for black water treatment. The results showed that 21 mg Fe3+/L was the optimal dosage for the chemical-enhanced pretreatment process, achieving average removal efficiencies of 51.1 and 74.1% for organics and phosphorus, respectively, with a slight enhancement in nitrogen removal by 2.3%. However, nitrogen and phosphorus removal could be further enhanced to 88 and 96%, by the addition of carbon sources in the post-anoxic zone of the reversed anaerobic-anoxic-aerobic process. Contrastingly, neither the addition of carbon sources in the pre-anoxic zone nor the prolongation of the time for pre-denitrification could significantly improve the nitrogen and phosphorus removal efficiencies. Furthermore, reducing the aeration intensity promoted simultaneous nitrification and denitrification in aerobic reactors, thereby making it a potential energy-saving method for system operation.

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