Abstract

The sustainability of wastewater treatment plants poses significant challenges for developing countries, necessitating substantial investment for operation and maintenance. Biofilm reactors seeded with specific species of microorganisms were investigated under controlled environmental conditions. However, the performance evaluation of such reactors under natural conditions remains largely underexplored. This study investigated wastewater treatment capabilities of bench-scale fixed bed biofilm reactors, employing various species (Wastewater Microbes, Pseudomonas, Algae, and a co-culture of Algae and Pseudomonas). The reactors (Treatments and Control) were filled with 28 mm nominal-size local aggregates as packing media, operated under different contact times, and subjected to varying concentrations of heavy metals (Zn, Cd). To assess the reactor performances, the Bland-Altman Plot and Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) removal kinetics were evaluated.The results revealed that the reactor initiated with a co-culture exhibited the optimal COD removal efficiency, reaching 84 ± 1 %. The reactor initially seeded with wastewater microbes exhibited the highest heavy metal elimination, achieving 94 ± 1 % and 88 ± 1 % removal for Zn and Cd respectively. The wastewater-seeded reactor demonstrated the zero-order COD removal kinetic coefficient (k) of 46.41 mg/L/h at an average influent COD concentration of 558 mg/L at 10 h contact time. While Pseudomonas-seeded reactor demonstrated k = 0.73 mg/L/h at 20 h contact time with 69 mg/L influent COD and heavy metal concentrations Zn = 26 mg/L and Cd = 3.57 mg/L.The findings of this study suggest that variations in environmental conditions, contact time, and heavy metal concentration have minimal impact on the pollutant removal efficacy of the reactors, and provide robust evidence for their viability as a sustainable alternative in municipal wastewater treatment. The study also identifies the possibility of treating specific wastewater characteristics by altering the dominant species in the reactors, paving the way for further research on the efficacy of other microbial genomes in fixed bed biofilm reactors.

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