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A value-added step towards promoting the serviceability of fluidized bed bioreactor in treating wastewater with low carbon to nitrogen ratio
Summary
Researchers demonstrated that reusing waste zeolite and microplastics as composite carrier particles in a fluidized bed bioreactor improved nitrogen removal from wastewater with low carbon-to-nitrogen ratios. The study shows microplastic waste can be repurposed as functional materials in wastewater treatment.
Reusing microplastics and zeolite waste as free ammonia (FA)-mitigating carrier particle was proven a value-added step towards promoting the serviceability of fluidized bed bioreactor (FBBR) in treating wastewater with a low carbon to nitrogen ratio (i.e. C/N <3.0) in this study. Ammonia (NH) adsorption property capacitates zeolite as an FA mitigator. The microplastics and reused zeolite were processed into reused-zeolite/microplastic composite particle (RZ), whose merit of FA mitigation was fully developed via an optimally thermal modification to process modified-zeolite/microplastic particle (MZ). The 171-day biological nutrient removal (BNR) performance in a single integrated fluidized bed bioreactor (SIFBBR) shows that the bioreactor with MZ particle (SIFBBR-MZ) achieved nitrogen removal efficiency 10.0% higher than the bioreactor with RZ particle (SIFBBR-RZ) over the enhanced short-cut nitrification and denitrification. Analysis of microbial community structure unveils that the long-term lower FA inhibition favored more significant ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) enrichment and acclimated specific MZ biofilm predominant by nitrite (NO) denitrifier, contributing to the outperformance in nitrogen removal. Apart from fluidization energy conservation, the techno-economic analysis confirms that using MZ as an FA-mitigating carrier could be of great benefit for FBBR system: realizing waste utilization, reducing carbon addition and alleviating sludge treatment.