Granular sludge (GS) technology is a cutting-edge advancement in wastewater (WW) treatment, enabling the simultaneous removal of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) in a single reactor. The process relies on granular microbial aggregates that support the growth of different communities, including nitrifiers, heterotrophic bacteria, polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs), and glycogen-accumulating organisms (GAOs). The granules enhance pollutant removal through spatially distinct metabolic activities, and PAOs play a key role in P removal by storing it intracellularly as polyphosphate, allowing P to be removed from WW and recovered. This study investigates the operation of an anaerobic-anoxic sequencing batch reactor (SBR) system fed on acetate as C source using nitrate as the sole electron acceptor. Operating in 4-hour cycles, divided into 90-min anaerobic and 150-min anoxic phases, the system promoted biomass granulation, developing dense granules from conventional flocculent sludge. Experimental results demonstrated the effective removal of organics, nitrate, and P, with low P release-to-C uptake ratio and high specific P uptake. The system also achieved excellent sludge settleability (SVI equal to 85.4 mL/g TSS after 5 minutes), minimal solids discharge (12 ± 8 mg TSS/L), and high-quality effluent, demonstrating that anoxic granular sludge technology could be a sustainable solution for advanced WW treatment and nutrient recovery in case of appropriate WW composition.

Achieving activated sludge granulation and evaluating the performance of an innovative anaerobic-anoxic sequencing batch reactor system

Giacomo Rizzardi;Keerthy Reena Krishna;ANDREA TUROLLA
2025-01-01

Abstract

Granular sludge (GS) technology is a cutting-edge advancement in wastewater (WW) treatment, enabling the simultaneous removal of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) in a single reactor. The process relies on granular microbial aggregates that support the growth of different communities, including nitrifiers, heterotrophic bacteria, polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs), and glycogen-accumulating organisms (GAOs). The granules enhance pollutant removal through spatially distinct metabolic activities, and PAOs play a key role in P removal by storing it intracellularly as polyphosphate, allowing P to be removed from WW and recovered. This study investigates the operation of an anaerobic-anoxic sequencing batch reactor (SBR) system fed on acetate as C source using nitrate as the sole electron acceptor. Operating in 4-hour cycles, divided into 90-min anaerobic and 150-min anoxic phases, the system promoted biomass granulation, developing dense granules from conventional flocculent sludge. Experimental results demonstrated the effective removal of organics, nitrate, and P, with low P release-to-C uptake ratio and high specific P uptake. The system also achieved excellent sludge settleability (SVI equal to 85.4 mL/g TSS after 5 minutes), minimal solids discharge (12 ± 8 mg TSS/L), and high-quality effluent, demonstrating that anoxic granular sludge technology could be a sustainable solution for advanced WW treatment and nutrient recovery in case of appropriate WW composition.
2025
Book of Abstract IWA EcoSTP 2025
Wastewater treatment
Denitrifying biological process
Granular sludge
Phosphorous removal
Polyphosphate-accumulating organisms
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1302794
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