Start-up strategies for anaerobic ammonia oxidation (Anammox) in in-situ nitrogen removal from polluted groundwater in rare earth mining areas

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Abstract

The tremendous input of ammonium and rare earth element (REE) ions released by the enormous consumption of (NH4 )2SO4 in in situ leaching for ion-adsorption RE mining caused serious ground and surface water contamination. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) was a sustainable in situ technology that can reduce this nitrogen pollution. In this research, in situ, semi in situ, and ex situ method of inoculation that included low-concentration (0.02 mg·L−1 ) and high-concentration (0.10 mg·L−1 ) lanthanum (La)(III) were adopted to explore effective start-up strategies for starting up anammox reactors seeded with activated sludge and anammox sludge. The reactors were refrigerated for 30 days at 4◦C to investigate the effects of La(III) during a period of low-temperature. The results showed that the in situ and semi in situ enrichment strategies with the addition of La(III) at a low-concentration La(III) addition (0.02 mg·L−1 ) reduced the length of time required to reactivate the sludge until it reached a state of stable anammox activity and high nitrogen removal efficiency by 60–71 days. The addition of La(III) promoted the formation of sludge floc with a compact structure that enabled it to resist the adverse effects of low temperature and so to maintain a high abundance of AnAOB and microbacterial community diversity of sludge during refrigeration period. The addition of La(III) at a high concentration caused the cellular percentage of AnAOB to decrease from 54.60 ± 6.19% to 17.35 ± 6.69% during the enrichment and reduced nitrogen removal efficiency to an unrecoverable level to post-refrigeration.

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Huang, S., & Wu, D. (2021). Start-up strategies for anaerobic ammonia oxidation (Anammox) in in-situ nitrogen removal from polluted groundwater in rare earth mining areas. Sustainability (Switzerland), 13(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/su13084591

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