A knowledge discovery framework to predict the NO emissions in the wastewater sector.

Water Res

Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Brunel University London, Uxbridge, UB8 3PH, UK. Electronic address:

Published: July 2020

Data Analytics is being deployed to predict the dissolved nitrous oxide (NO) concentration in a full-scale sidestream sequence batch reactor (SBR) treating the anaerobic supernatant. On average, the NO emissions are equal to 7.6% of the NH-N load and can contribute up to 97% to the operational carbon footprint of the studied nitritation-denitritation and via-nitrite enhanced biological phosphorus removal process (SCENA). The analysis showed that average aerobic dissolved NO concentration could significantly vary under similar influent loads, dissolved oxygen (DO), pH and removal efficiencies. A combination of density-based clustering, support vector machine (SVM), and support vector regression (SVR) models were deployed to estimate the dissolved NO concentration and behaviour in the different phases of the SBR system. The results of the study reveal that the aerobic dissolved NO concentration is correlated with the drop of average aerobic conductivity rate (spearman correlation coefficient equal to 0.7), the DO (spearman correlation coefficient equal to -0.7) and the changes of conductivity between sequential cycles. Additionally, operational conditions resulting in low aerobic NO accumulation (<0.6 mg/L) were identified; step-feeding, control of initial NH concentrations and aeration duration can mitigate the NO peaks observed in the system. The NO emissions during aeration shows correlation with the stripping of accumulated NO from the previous anoxic cycle. The analysis shows that NO is always consumed after the depletion of NO during denitritation (after the "nitrite knee"). Based on these findings SVM classifiers were constructed to predict whether dissolved NO will be consumed during the anoxic and anaerobic phases and SVR models were trained to predict the NO concentration at the end of the anaerobic phase and the average dissolved NO concentration during aeration. The proposed approach accurately predicts the NO emissions as a latent parameter from other low-cost sensors that are traditionally deployed in biological batch processes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2020.115799DOI Listing

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