AI Article Synopsis

  • Peracetic acid (PAA) is increasingly used as a disinfectant in poultry processing, but its effects on biological wastewater treatment remain unclear.
  • The study showed that while indirect addition of PAA and hydrogen peroxide (HO) didn't hinder wastewater treatment, direct high-dose additions caused significant nitrification inhibition.
  • The main reason for nitrification inhibition was enzyme inhibition rather than cell viability loss, with shifts in microbial community composition observed without affecting the abundance of ammonia and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria.

Article Abstract

Peracetic acid (PAA) has been widely used as a disinfectant in many industries; its use in poultry processing is steadily increasing. However, information related to the potential inhibitory effect of PAA solutions (PAA and HO) on biological wastewater treatment processes used by the poultry processing industry is extremely limited. The work reported here assessed the long-term effect of PAA solution on aerobic degradation and nitrification in three bioreactors fed with poultry processing wastewater by quantifying the extent of COD removal and nitrification rates. Changes in culture viability, intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), and microbial community structure were also evaluated. COD removal and nitrification were not affected by HO and PAA solutions added to the wastewater before feeding (indirect addition). However, both processes were significantly affected by high levels of HO (i.e., 27 mg/L) and PAA solution (i.e., 60/8.4 mg/L PAA/HO) directly added to the reactors. Directly added PAA/HO at 40/5.6 mg/L was the lowest dose resulting in nitrification inhibition. Fast recovery of COD removal and nitrification was observed when direct addition of HO and PAA solution ended. Cell viability measurements revealed that the negative impact on nitrification was predominantly attributed to enzyme inhibition rather than to loss of cell viability. The impact on nitrification was not related to intracellular ROS levels. Microbiome analysis showed major shifts in community composition during the long-term addition of HO and even more with PAA addition. No significant time-trend change in the relative abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria or nitrite-oxidizing bacteria was observed, further supporting the conclusion that the negative impact on nitrification was attributed mainly to enzyme inhibition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2020.116694DOI Listing

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