Abstract

A pilot-scale aerobic granular sequencing batch reactor (SBR) with domestic wastewater was operated to evaluate the effects of the low organic loading rate (OLR) due to wet weather flow conditions on simultaneous nitrification, denitrification, and phosphorus removal (SNDPR). As the OLR decreased from 0.85 to 0.43 kg COD m−3 d−1, the total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) removal efficiencies decreased from 84.0% and 94.1% to 51.3% and 73.8%, respectively, the sludge volume index (SVI) increased from 42.3 to 85.5 mL g−1, and the average granular size decreased from 1022 to 742 μm; however, no sludge disintegration and biomass loss were observed. The poor nutrient removal efficiencies and settling ability were due to the shrinking anoxic zone and substrate scarcity inside the granules, wherein the activity decay of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and overgrowth of filamentous bacteria played an important role. Alternating the aeration intensity was effective in enhancing nitrogen removal and sludge settling by improving the anoxic activity in granules and inhibiting the proliferation of filamentous bacteria. Returning 20% of sludge from the end of one anaerobic stage to the beginning of the next anaerobic stage (midway sludge return) was beneficial for phosphorus removal as it improved phosphorus storage by phosphorus-accumulating bacteria. A smaller granular size with stronger stability and better nutrient removal performance was the new steady state of the SNDPR system under wet-weather flow conditions.

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