Effect of temperature & salt concentration on salt tolerant nitrate-perchlorate reducing bacteria: Nitrate degradation kinetics.

Water Res

Biological Solutions Laboratory, School of Engineering, University of British Columbia, 3333 University Way, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: October 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The research explores the sustainability of treating nitrate-contaminated water through multi-cycle bioregeneration of ion-exchange resin, focusing on the effects of temperature and salt concentration on the denitrification process.
  • The findings show that while the nitrate removal rate increases with temperature, higher salt concentrations negatively impact degradation rates, with significant variances observed at different temperatures.
  • This study is the first to analyze the interaction between salt concentration and temperature on biological denitrification, revealing that low temperatures substantially diminish the culture's ability to tolerate high salt levels.

Article Abstract

The sustainability of nitrate-contaminated water treatment using ion-exchange processes can be achieved by regenerating the exhausted resin several times. Our previous study shows that the use of multi-cycle bioregeneration of resin enclosed in membrane is an effective and innovative regeneration method. In this research, the effects of two independent factors (temperature and salt concentration) on the biological denitrification rate were studied. The results of this research along with the experimental results of the previous study on the effect of the same factors on nitrate desorption rate from the resin allow the optimization of the bioregeneration process. The results of nitrate denitrification rate study show that the biodegradation rate at different temperature and salt concentration is independent of the initial nitrate concentration. At each specific salt concentration, the nitrate removal rate increased with increasing temperature with the average value of 0.001110 ± 0.0000647 mg-nitrate/mg-VSS.h.°C. However, the effect of different salt concentrations was dependent on the temperature; there is a significant interaction between salt concentration and temperature; within each group of temperatures, the nitrate degradation rate decreased with increasing the salt concentration. The temperature affected the tolerance to salinity and culture was less tolerant to high concentration of salt at low temperature. Evidenced by the difference between the minimum and maximum nitrate degradation rate being greater at lower temperature. At 35 °C, a 32% reduction in the nitrate degradation rate was observed while at 12 °C this reduction was 69%. This is the first published study to examine the interaction of salt concentration and temperature during biological denitrification.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2015.07.006DOI Listing

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