Evaluation of biofilm scouring methods on the nitrification efficiency in a pilot-scale membrane-aerated biofilm reactor
Membrane-aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs) are being increasingly being implemented at full-scale for domestic wastewater treatment and effective biofilm control is critical to their performance. This study investigated the impact of three biofilm scouring strategies on nitrogen removal performance of a pilot-scale MABR operated in Houston, TX: (1) regular air scouring, (2) high intensity air scouring, and (3) high liquid flow scouring. Normal and high intensity air scouring regimes and a high liquid flow scour (10× baseline flow) were each tested sequentially. High NH4+-N removal efficiency of 52% in flow-through mode was observed post-high liquid flow scouring, which was comparable to the performance during the intense scouring regime. The absolute abundance of amoA gene for ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB) increased significantly by over 200%, between pre- and post-high liquid flow scouring. The energy consumption was 43% lower for the combination of high liquid flow scouring with regular air scouring as compared to the intense air scouring. This study showed that high liquid flows may be utilized as an energy-efficient biofilm control strategy in nitrifying MABR systems.
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DOI
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Related Subject Headings
- Water Purification
- Water Pollutants
- Nitrification
- Environmental Engineering
- Drainage, Sanitary
- Bioreactors
- Biofilms
- Ammonia
- Air
- 40 Engineering
Citation
Published In
DOI
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Related Subject Headings
- Water Purification
- Water Pollutants
- Nitrification
- Environmental Engineering
- Drainage, Sanitary
- Bioreactors
- Biofilms
- Ammonia
- Air
- 40 Engineering