Abstract

ABSTRACT Acclimatization of short-cut denitrifying polyphosphate accumulating organisms (SDPAOs), metabolic mechanism, and operating parameters were analyzed to investigate the performance of the anaerobic/anoxic sequencing batch reactor (A2SBR) process. The high-throughput sequencing technology was employed to explore the microbial community structures of activated sludge systems. The experimental results illustrated that SDPAOs were successfully enriched with three-phase inoculation for 36 days. The removal rates of TP and NO2 −-N were 93.22% and 91.36%, respectively, under the optimal parameters of a pH of 7.5, an SRT of 26 days, a temperature of 24 ℃ and a COD of 200.00 mg·L−1 using acetate as the carbon source. In the anaerobic stage, 82.20% external carbon source was converted into 88.78 mg·g−1 PHB, and the removal rate of NO2 −-N in the anoxic stage was characterized by ΔNO2 −-N/ΔPHB, anoxic ΔP/ΔPHBeffective was 0.289, which was higher than anaerobic ΔP/ΔCODeffective of 0.203. Ignavibacterium and Povalibacter with significant phosphorus removal ability were the dominant bacterial genera. The nitrogen and phosphorus removal could be realized simultaneously in an anaerobic/anoxic sequencing batch reactor. Therefore, this study provided an important understanding of the removal of nitrogen and phosphorus from low-carbon nitrogen wastewater.

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