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Biological CNP removal from meat-processing wastewater in an innovative high rate up-flow A 2 O bioreactor.

Chemosphere 2018 December
A high rate up-flow anaerobic, anoxic and oxic (A2 O) bioreactor was designed and operated for meat-processing wastewater (MPW) treatment as a single cost-effective system with the aim of simultaneous CNP removal. The influence of three essential factors, HRT, COD/TN ratio and aerated volume fraction on the reactor performance was assessed using response surface methodology (RSM). The required HRT to reach 98.5% COD removal was achieved at 7.5 h. Simultaneous CNP removal under denitrification rate of 199.4 mg/l.d gave high nitrate to nitrogen gas conversion of 74.6 mg/l. An HRT, COD/TN ratio and aerated volume fraction of 10 h, 100:20 and 60%, respectively, was a favored condition for an efficient nitrogen removal with effluent total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN) less than 70 mg/l. Under optimum condition, an HRT, COD/TN and aerated volume fraction of 8 h, 100:14 and 65%, respectively, resulted an effluent phosphorus of 43 mg/l, but 93.97 mg/l phosphorus was released in an anaerobic condition at 6 h. An effluent with a low turbidity of about 1.5 NTU and a sludge volume index (SVI) of 75.9 ml/g was achieved using at HRT of 12.5 h, COD/TN ratio of 100: 8 and aerated volume fraction of 50%. Under these conditions, the removal efficiencies for COD, TKN, nitrate-nitrogen (NO3 - -N), total nitrogen (TN) and phosphorus (PO4 3- -P) were obtained to be 98.33, 92.06, 91.97, 90.48 and 83.48%, respectively. As a result, the application of the up-flow A2 O bioreactor is a promising configuration to get hygienic water from wastewater.

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