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Competition between Polyphosphate‐ and Glycogen‐Accumulating Organisms in Enhanced‐Biological‐Phosphorus‐Removal Systems: Effect of Temperature and Sludge Age
116
Citations
17
References
2006
Year
Sewage Sludge TreatmentEngineeringBiological Waste TreatmentAnaerobic DigestionSludge AgeWastewater TreatmentEnhanced‐biological‐phosphorus‐removal SystemsBioremediationBiochemical EngineeringMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyEbpr PerformanceGlycogen‐accumulating OrganismsWastewater ManagementResource RecoveryWaste ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationEbpr EfficiencyMicrobiologyMedicineMicrobiological Degradation
Temperature and sludge age were found to be important factors in determining the outcome of competition between polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) and glycogen-accumulating non-polyphosphate organisms (GAOs) and the resultant stability of enhanced-biological-phosphorus removal (EBPR). At 20 degrees C and a 10-day sludge age, PAOs were dominant in an anaerobic/aerobic (A/O) sequencing-batch reactor (SBR), as a result of their higher anaerobic-acetate-uptake rate and aerobic-biomass yield than GAOs. However, at 30 degrees C and a 10-day sludge age, GAOs were able to outcompete PAOs in the A/O SBR because of their higher anaerobic-acetate-uptake rate than PAOs. At 30 degrees C and a 5-day sludge age, GAOs coexisted with PAOs in the A/O SBR, resulting in unstable EBPR performance. At 30 degrees C, reducing the sludge age from 5 to 3 days improved the EBPR efficiency drastically, and the EBPR performance was stable. The maximum specific-anaerobic-acetate-uptake rates of GAO-enriched sludge were affected by temperature with the Arrhenius temperature coefficient theta of 0.042 (degrees C(-1) between 10 and 30 degrees C. The effect of sludge age (5 and 10 days) on the maximum specific-anaerobic-acetate-uptake rates of GAO-enriched activated sludge, however, was not significant. For the PAO-enriched activated sludge, the maximum specific-anaerobic-acetate-uptake rate did not change significantly between 20 and 30 degrees C, but significantly increased from 0.38 to 0.52 mmol-C/ mmol-C/h as the sludge age decreased from 10 to 3 days at 30 degrees C.
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