Abstract

Thermophilic anaerobic treatment of sulphur-rich paper mill wastewater (0.8-3.1 gCOD/1, 340-850 mgSO4/l; COD:SO4 3.4-5.3) was studied in three laboratory-scale, upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) reactors and in bioassays. The reactors were inoculated with non-adapted thermophilic granular sludge. In the bioassays, no inhibition of the inoculum was detected and about 62% COD removal (sulphide stripped) was obtained. About 70 to 80% of the removed COD was methanised. In the reactors, up to 60-74% COD removal (effluent sulphide stripped) was obtained at loading rates up to 10-30 kgCOD/m3d and hydraulic retention times down to 6 to 2 hours. The effluent total sulphide was up to 150-250 mg/l. Sulphide inhibition could not be confirmed from the reactor performances. The results from bioassays suggested that both the inoculum and sludge from the UASB reactor used acetate mainly for methane production, while sulphide was produced from hydrogen or its precursors.

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