[Simultaneous Nitrogen and Phosphorus Removal and Kinetics by the Heterotrophic Nitrifying Bacterium NP1]
Overview
Affiliations
Due to the problems of traditional biological nitrogen and phosphorus removal, including long process duration and high infrastructural and operational costs, the simultaneous nitrogen and phosphorus removal capabilities, influencing factors and kinetic characteristics were systematically studied using the heterotrophic nitrifier NP1 which possesses efficient simultaneous nitrogen and phosphorus removal ability. The results showed that strain NP1 exhibited efficient heterotrophic nitrification ability with a maximum ammonia removal rate of 99.12%. Furthermore, only small amounts of nitrification intermediates were accumulated during the reaction process. Strain NP1 also adapted well to higher ammonia nitrogen loading. In addition, strain NP1 had efficient aerobic denitrification characteristics, and could utilize nitrite and nitrate for growth and metabolism, achieving a maximum removal rate of 91.40% and 95.10%, respectively. The heterotrophic nitrification process of strain NP1 was accompanied by simultaneous phosphorus accumulation, and the appropriate ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus was beneficial for the simultaneous removal of nitrogen and phosphorus. When the ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus was 5:1, the maximum ammonia nitrogen and phosphate removal rates reached 99.21% and 88.35%, respectively. The bacterial growth process of stain NP1 matched the Logistic model (>0.99), and the nitrogen and phosphate degradation conformed to the Compertz model (>0.99). The maximum conversion rates of nitrogen and phosphate () obtained by model fitting were in the order ammonia>nitrate>nitrite, and lag time (0) was in the order nitrate>nitrite>ammonia. According to the analysis of the degradation kinetics of the matrix and the removal rate of nitrogen and phosphorus, the optimal conditions were found to be sodium succinate, C/N=10, =30℃, and =160 r·min.