Abstract

Rotating Biological Contactors (RBC) treating highly nitrogenous wastewaters are known to give rise to nitrogen losses, generally assumed to be due to concomitant nitrification and denitrification. In this study, a lab-scale nitrifying RBC reactor was shown to bring about losses of nitrogen of the order of 10 to 20% at ammonium loading rates of up to 2129 mg N m−2 d−1, when no extra carbon source was added. These higher removal values could be due to Oxygen-Limited Autotrophic Nitrification and Denitrification (OLAND), because the reactor was operated at oxygen limitation. When methanol was added as a soluble organic carbon source to further diminish oxygen transfer into the deeper parts of the biofilm, the RBC achieved 84% nitrogen removal (loading rate 2300 mg N m−2 d−1) at a COD/N ratio of 3.1. The latter also suggests that the OLAND process was occurring parallel to conventional denitrification.

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