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Gravity-driven high flux filtration behavior and microbial community of an integrated granular activated carbon and dynamic membrane bioreactor for domestic wastewater treatment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated a gravity-driven membrane bioreactor (G-DMBR) enhanced with granular activated carbon (GAC) for treating domestic wastewater, showing it could effectively remove over 88% of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and 98% of ammonia (NH-N).
  • The addition of GAC significantly improved membrane permeability, achieving a filtration flux of 17 to 65 L/mh, which is about four times higher than the control bioreactor without GAC (C-DMBR).
  • The research found that GAC not only supported a more robust dynamic membrane structure but also altered the microbial community, reducing fouling-related bacteria while favoring others that thrive in attached growth.

Article Abstract

A gravity-driven dynamic membrane bioreactors (DMBR) with GAC addition (G-DMBR) was operated under constant pressure filtration mode (using 20 cm water head) for real domestic wastewater treatment. During the stable operation period, the treatment performance, DM filtration behavior and mechanism as well as microbial properties were studied and compared with a control DMBR (C-DMBR). Both DMBRs showed stable removal of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and ammonia (NH-N) with average removal rates over 88% and 98%, respectively. GAC addition effectively enhanced dynamic membrane (DM) permeability with a stable flux of 17 to 65 L/mh, which was approximately four times higher than that in the C-DMBR without GAC addition. Filtration resistance analysis indicated the DM formation can be divided to three stages: the formation of the initial DM layer, the development of mature DM layer and dynamic equilibrium stage of the DM layer. Filtration model analysis illustrated that added GAC could be the skeleton of the DM, resulting in a more porous and incompressible DM layer. Additionally, microbial community analysis revealed that in the G-DMBR several fouling-causing phyla including Proteobacteria reduced while other phyla preferring attached growth such as Bacteroidetes and Gemmatimonadetes increased. Thus, adding GAC to the DMBR can be an effective strategy for achieving stable and high-flux operation by modifying DM properties and regulating DM formation process and structure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153930DOI Listing

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