Publication | Closed Access
Bubbleless Air Shapes Biofilms and Facilitates Natural Organic Matter Transformation in Biological Activated Carbon
25
Citations
54
References
2023
Year
Sewage Sludge TreatmentEngineeringBiological Waste TreatmentMunicipal WastewaterWastewater TreatmentBiofilmsChemical EngineeringBioremediationBiological Activated CarbonMicrobial EcologyWater TreatmentEnvironmental MicrobiologyHealth SciencesWastewater ManagementHollow Fiber MembraneIndustrial WastewaterWaste ManagementCarbonizationEnvironmental EngineeringWater PurificationEnvironmental RemediationBac FilterActivated CarbonAbac Filter
The biodegradation in the middle and downstream of slow-rate biological activated carbon (BAC) is limited by insufficient dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations. In this study, a bubbleless aerated BAC (termed ABAC) process was developed by installing a hollow fiber membrane (HFM) module within a BAC filter to continuously provide aeration throughout the BAC system. The BAC filter without an HFM was termed NBAC. The laboratory-scale ABAC and NBAC systems operated continuously for 426 days using secondary sewage effluent as an influent. The DO concentrations for NBAC and ABAC were 0.78 ± 0.27 and 4.31 ± 0.44 mg/L, respectively, with the latter providing the ABAC with greater electron acceptors for biodegradation and a microbial community with better biodegradation and metabolism capacity. The biofilms in ABAC secreted 47.3% less EPS and exhibited greater electron transfer capacity than those in NBAC, resulting in enhanced contaminant degradation efficiency and long-term stability. The extra organic matter removed by ABAC included refractory substances with a low elemental ratio of oxygen to carbon (O/C) and a high elemental ratio of hydrogen to carbon (H/C). The proposed ABAC filter provides a valuable, practical example of how to modify the BAC technology to shape the microbial community, and its activity, by optimizing the ambient atmosphere.
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