Abstract

New odour prevention strategies in wastewater treatment facilities need to be investigated to find effective and low-cost technologies for the control of malodorous emissions. In this study, the potential of activated sludge (AS) and oxidized nitrogen (N-NOx) recycling as an environmentally-friendly and cost-effective strategy for the prevention and minimization of odour nuisance during wastewater treatment was evaluated and optimized using H2S, acetic acid and α-pinene as model odorants in 2.1 L gas tight bottles. This approach uses by-products from wastewater treatment to mitigate odour annoyance. Preliminary abiotic tests showed headspace concentration losses of 25% for H2S and α-pinene, and 7% for acetic acid due to odorant adsorption in 4 h. The experiments carried out at different concentrations of AS (0, 10, 25, 50, 100 mg VSS/L) and oxidized nitrogen (1.5, 5, 7.5 and 10 mg N-NOx/L) revealed an effective H2S removal at 7.5–10 mg N-NOx/L and 50–100 mg VSS/L. Interestingly, NO3− was more effective than NO2− as electron acceptor during the biodegradation of H2S regardless of the AS concentration and N-NOx concentrations. In the presence of dissolved H2S and AS concentrations of 50–100 mg VSS/L, acetic acid was partially metabolized by microorganisms at the end of experiment (from 27 to 23 ppmv in 4.5 h), while α-pinene concentrations experienced a similar gradual decrease than in the abiotic tests. Finally, the assays carried out at concentrations ≥5 mg NO3−/L and 25 mg VSS/L showed a reduction of NO3− to NO2− correlated with the biological oxidation of H2S, which suggested the need to control NO3− supply under sulphur limiting conditions to prevent toxicity problems during wastewater treatment.

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