Nitrogen Advanced Treatment of Urban Sewage by Denitrification Deep-Bed Filter: Removal Performance and Metabolic Pathway

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Abstract

This study aimed to explore the performance of denitrification deep-bed filter (DN-DBF) to treat municipal sewage for meeting a more stringent discharge standard of total nitrogen (TN) (10.0 mg L–1). A lab-scale DN-DBF was conducted to optimize operation parameters and reveal the microbiological mechanism for TN removal. The results showed that more than 12.7% TN removal was obtained by adding methanol compared with sodium acetate. The effluent TN concentration reached 6.0–7.0 mg L–1 with the optimal influent carbon and nitrogen ratio (C/N) and hydraulic retention time (HRT) (3:1 and 0.25 h). For the nitrogen removal mechanism, Blastocatellaceae_Subgroup_4 and norank_o_JG30-KF-CM45 were dominant denitrification floras with an abundance of 6–10%. Though large TN was removed at the top layer of DN-DBF, microbial richness and diversity at the middle layer were higher than both ends. However, the relative abundance of nitrite reductase enzymes (EC1.7.2.1) gradually increases as the depth increases; conversely, the relative abundance of nitrous oxide reductase gradually decreased.

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Huang, X., Xing, Y., Wang, H., Dai, Z., & Chen, T. (2022). Nitrogen Advanced Treatment of Urban Sewage by Denitrification Deep-Bed Filter: Removal Performance and Metabolic Pathway. Frontiers in Microbiology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.811697

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