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  • Free Ammonia Pretreatment to Enhance Biodegradation of Anaerobically Digested Sludge in Post Aerobic Digestion

    Author(s)
    Wei, Wei
    Zhou, Xu
    Wang, Dongbo
    Sun, Jing
    Nghiem, Long D
    Wang, Qilin
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Wang, Qilin
    Year published
    2018
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), sludge reduction was implemented via sequential anaerobic–aerobic digestion. However, the performance of post aerobic digestion for anaerobically digested sludge (ADS) is limited. Free ammonia (FA)-based pretreatment technology is proposed in this study as an innovative method to enhance the degradation efficiency of post aerobic digestion for ADS. Pretreatment using FA at >440 mg NH3–N/L for 24 h significantly increased ADS solubilization. The highest solubilization was reached at 1030 mg NH3–N/L, which (0.12 mg COD/mg VS) is 6 times that (0.02 mg COD/mg VS) of no treatment. The batch ...
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    In wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), sludge reduction was implemented via sequential anaerobic–aerobic digestion. However, the performance of post aerobic digestion for anaerobically digested sludge (ADS) is limited. Free ammonia (FA)-based pretreatment technology is proposed in this study as an innovative method to enhance the degradation efficiency of post aerobic digestion for ADS. Pretreatment using FA at >440 mg NH3–N/L for 24 h significantly increased ADS solubilization. The highest solubilization was reached at 1030 mg NH3–N/L, which (0.12 mg COD/mg VS) is 6 times that (0.02 mg COD/mg VS) of no treatment. The batch experiments of post aerobic digestion demonstrated unpretreated ADS over the 8 days post aerobic digestion was degraded by 18.4%, whereas 31.3–33.6% of the pretreated ADS with FA at 440–1030 mg NH3–N/L was degraded, representing a relative increase of 70–83%. Accordingly, inorganic nitrogen production increased in a similar way. Model analysis results revealed the enhanced ADS degradation was because of the increase in both hydrolysis rate and degradable percentage of ADS. Capillary suction time (CST) tests demonstrated FA-based pretreatment was able to generate ADS with greater dewaterability, as revealed by the decline of normalized CST from 77 s for ADS without pretreatment to 63–74 s for ADS with FA pretreatment at 65–1030 NH3–N/L, with the best ADS dewaterability at 1030 mg NH3–N/L of FA. Economic assessment showed that this FA pretreatment technology could be economically favorable.
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    Journal Title
    ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
    Volume
    6
    Issue
    9
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.8b02125
    Subject
    Analytical chemistry
    Analytical chemistry not elsewhere classified
    Chemical engineering
    Pollution and contamination
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/382441
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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