Post-anoxic denitrification driven by PHA and glycogen within enhanced biological phosphorus removal

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Abstract

The objective of this research was to interrogate and develop a better understanding for a process to achieve post-anoxic denitrification without exogenous carbon augmentation within enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR). Sequencing batch reactors fed real wastewater and seeded with mixed microbial consortia were operated under variable anaerobic-aerobic-anoxic and organic carbon loading conditions. The process consistently achieved phosphorus and nitrogen removal, while the observed specific denitrification rates were markedly higher than expected for post-anoxic systems operated without exogenous organic carbon addition. Investigations revealed that post-anoxic denitrification was predominantly driven by glycogen, an intracellular carbon storage polymer associated with EBPR; moreover, glycogen reserves can be significantly depleted post-anoxically without compromising EBPR. Success of the proposed process is predicated on providing sufficient organic acids in the influent wastewater, such that residual nitrate carried over from the post-anoxic period is reduced and polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) synthesis occurs. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.

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Coats, E. R., Mockos, A., & Loge, F. J. (2011). Post-anoxic denitrification driven by PHA and glycogen within enhanced biological phosphorus removal. Bioresource Technology, 102(2), 1019–1027. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2010.09.104

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