Abstract

In the trend of upgrading wastewater treatment plants, developing advanced treatment technologies for more efficient nutrient removal is crucial. This study prepared a pyrrhotite-biochar composite (Fex Sy @BC) to investigate its potential for simultaneous removal of nitrate and phosphate under autotrophic denitrification conditions. X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) were used to characterize the novel composite of Fex Sy @BC, which exhibited 9.2mg N/(L·d) NO3 - -N reduction rate, 97.3% N2 production, and 81.8mmol N/(kg·d) NO3 - -N material load with small solid/liquid ratio (0.008). The NO3 - -N removal with Fex Sy @BC was 1.2-2.2 times higher than that with pure iron sulfides or biochar or their mixtures, whereas the Δn(S)/Δn(N) of Fex Sy @BC was the lowest (1.80). Moreover, the PO4 3- -P reduction rate of Fex Sy @BC reached 3.23 mg P/(L·d), as high as that of pure pyrite or pyrrhotite. Thiobacillus was the most dominant denitrifying bacterium. Fex Sy @BC exhibited great promise for enhancing nutrient removal from secondary effluent without additional carbon source. PRACTITIONER POINTS: FexSy@BC enhanced nitrate and phosphate removal simultaneously. First-order kinetics and Monod model were fitted for denitrification with FexSy@BC. FexSy@BC had smaller molar ratio of sulfate release to nitrate removal. Thiobacillus was the dominant bacterium in FexSy@BC autotrophic denitrification. Synergistic effects on nutrients removal existed between biochar and pyrrhotite.

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