Abstract
This study is a first kinetic approach about the compost liquor treatment by activated sludge. This industrial wastewater is highly loaded in organic and nitrogen compounds (COD≈12,000 mg L-1 and NH4+-N≈4, 000 mg L-1). The possibility of its treatment in an urban WWTP is studied measuring ammonia oxidation rate with non-acclimated sludge to the industrial effluent. Compost liquor appears as an inhibitor substrate. The ammonia oxidation rate can be modelled by the Haldane model: U MAX=0.180 d-1, KS=12.0 mgN.L-1 and KI=26.0 mgN.L-1. The ammonia oxidation rate also follows for a synthetic substrate which has the same pollutant load as the real substrate. In this case, the ammonia oxidation rate can be modelled by the Monod model: UMAX=0.073 d-1 and KS=4.3 mgN.L -1. This result confirms that the ammonia oxidising bacteria are inhibited by the real wastewater. The following-up of nitrate production shows also the inhibition of nitrite oxidising bacteria. The compost liquor treatment seems not possible in an urban WWTP (<50,000 p.e.). That's why a specific WWTP is recommended and an acclimation step of activated sludge is essential. © IWA Publishing 2011.
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Gagnaire, J., Wang, X. Y., Chapon, L., Moulin, P., & Marrot, B. (2011). Kinetic study of compost liquor nitrification. Water Science and Technology, 63(5), 868–876. https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2011.263
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