Glycerol-driven denitratation: process kinetics, microbial ecology, and operational controls†
Abstract
Denitratation, the selective reduction of nitrate to nitrite, is a novel process and when coupled with anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) could achieve resource-efficient biological nitrogen removal of ammonium- and nitrate-laden waste streams. Using a fundamentally-based, first principles approach, this study optimized a stoichiometrically-limited, glycerol-driven denitratation process and characterized mechanisms supporting nitrite accumulation with results that aligned with expectations. At the optimal influent chemical oxygen demand to nitrate ratio of 3.0 : 1 identified, glycerol supported selective nitrate reduction to nitrite (nitrite accumulation ratio, NAR = 62%) and near-complete nitrate conversion (nitrate reduction ratio, NRR = 96%), indicating its viability in a denitratation system. Specific rates of nitrate reduction (135.3 mg N per g VSS h−1) were at least one order of magnitude greater than specific rates of nitrite reduction (14.9 mg N per g VSS h−1), potentially resulting in transient nitrite accumulation and indicating glycerol's superiority over other organic carbon sources in denitratation systems. Optimal stoichiometric limitation pH and ORP inflection points in nitrogen transformation assays corresponded to maximum nitrite accumulation, indicating operational setpoints to prevent further nitrite reduction. Denitratation conditions supported enrichment of Thauera sp. as the dominant genus. Stoichiometric limitation of influent organic carbon, coupled with differential nitrate and nitrite reduction kinetics, optimized operational controls, and a distinctively enriched microbial ecology was identified as causal in glycerol-driven denitratation.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology Recent HOT Articles