Abstract

The need for preserving the environment is tightening regulations limiting the discharge of contaminants into water bodies. Nowadays most of the effort is done on the removal of more specific contaminants such as nutrients (N and P) and sulfurous compounds since they are becoming of great concern due to its impact on the quality of water bodies. There have been two recent discoveries of microbial conversions of nitrogenous compounds. One consisting on the capability of ammonia oxidizers of denitrify under certain conditions resulting in a new one-step method for the removal of N-compounds. The second has been named the ANAMMOX process, wherein ammonium is oxidized to dinitrogen gas with nitrite as the electron acceptor. Other developments consist of operational strategies aiming at obtaining the highest efficiency at removing nitrogen at lowest cost. One strategy consists of the partial nitrification to nitrite (only successful in the SHARON process) and subsequently either the heterotrophic denitrification of nitrites or its autotrophic reduction by ANAMMOX microorganisms. Another strategy consists of the coexistence of nitrifiers and denitrifiers in the same reactor by implementing high frequency oscillations on the oxygen level. The recent developments on biological phosphorous removal are based on the capacity of some denitrifying microorganisms to store ortho-phosphate intracellular as poly-phosphate in the presence of nitrate. These microorganisms store substrate (PHB) anaerobically which is further oxidized when nitrate is present. By extracting excess sludge from the anoxic phase, phosphate is removed from the system. Removing phosphate using nitrate instead of oxygen has the advantage of saving energy (oxygen input) and using less organic carbon. The microbial conversions of sulfurous compounds involve the metabolism of several different specific groups of bacteria such as sulfate reducing bacteria, sulfur and sulfide oxidizing bacteria, and phototrophic sulfur bacteria. Some of these microorganisms can simultaneously use nitrate, what has been reported as autotrophic denitrification by sulfur and sulfide oxidizing microorganisms. More recently, the anaerobic treatment of an industrial wastewater rich in organic matter, nitrogen and sulfate, reported a singular evolution of N and S compounds that initially was hypothesized as SURAMOX (SUlfate Reduction and AMmonia OXidation). The process could not have been verified nor reproduced and further investigations on the proposed SURAMOX mechanism have given no additional insights to those initial observations.

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