Abstract

Our previous reports have presented single-step treatment of primary-settled urban wastewater by a mixotrophic alga, Galdieria sulphuraria. Here, we present an approach to predict the operational cycle time, t*, required to meet the discharge standards for ammoniacal-nitrogen (NH3-N), phosphate (PO4) and biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) in fed-batch mode, under varying influent concentrations. First order removal rates of NH3-N, PO4 and BOD, determined using data from 10 fed-batch cycles in a pilot scale system (700 L), were used to predict their temporal fate and t* in 30 other cycles. Predicted concentrations of NH3-N, PO4, and BOD and t* over a wide range of influent concentrations agreed well with the measured ones, with root mean square errors, respectively, of 2.06 mg/L, 0.23 mg/L, 2.88 mg/L and 0.30 days. The coefficient of determination between the measured and the predicted values were as follows: for NH3-N: r2 = 0.82, n = 90; for PO4: r2 = 0.87, n = 90; for BOD: r2 = 0.70, n = 30; and for t*: r2 = 0.61, n = 30. The validity of the model in predicting temporal concentration profiles of NH3-N, PO4 and BOD reflected by Janus quotient (respectively of 0.85, 0.87 and 0.61) is comparable to or better than those reported in the literature. Sensitivity analysis procedures identified the influent concentration of PO4 as the most sensitive parameter in predicting t*.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call