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Nitrite-dependent microbial utilization for simultaneous removal of sulfide and methane in sewers. | LitMetric

Nitrite-dependent microbial utilization for simultaneous removal of sulfide and methane in sewers.

Water Res X

State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control, School of Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, PR China.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chemicals used in sewers to control hydrogen sulfide and methane emissions are costly and raise environmental concerns, prompting the exploration of nitrite dosing from urine wastewater as a promising and sustainable strategy.
  • * The study suggests a "microbial utilization" approach instead of inhibiting microorganisms, exploiting nitrite as a substrate for reducing these harmful gases in sewer systems.
  • * In laboratory tests, low-level nitrite dosing led to significant reductions in methane (58%) and sulfide (over 90%) through successful microbial processes, highlighting the effectiveness of this innovative method.

Article Abstract

Chemicals are commonly dosed in sewer systems to reduce the emission of hydrogen sulfide (HS) and methane (CH), incurring high costs and environmental concerns. Nitrite dosing is a promising approach as nitrite can be produced from urine wastewater, which is a feasible integrated water management strategy. However, nitrite dosing usually requires strict conditions, e.g., relatively high nitrite concentration (e.g., ∼200 mg N/L) and acidic environment, to inhibit microorganisms. In contrast to "microbial inhibition", this study proposes "microbial utilization" concept, i.e., utilizing nitrite as a substrate for HS and CH consumption in sewer. In a laboratory-scale sewer reactor, nitrite at a relatively low concentrations of 25-48 mg N/L was continuously dosed. Two nitrite-dependent microbial utilization processes, i.e., nitrite-dependent anaerobic methane oxidation (n-DAMO) and microbial sulfide oxidation, successfully occurred in conjunction with nitrite reduction. The occurrence of both processes achieved a 58 % reduction in dissolved methane and over 90 % sulfide removal in the sewer reactor, with microbial activities measured as 15.6 mg CH/(L·h) and 29.4 mg S/(L·h), respectively. High copy numbers of n-DAMO bacteria and sulfide-oxidizing bacteria (SOB) were detected in both sewer biofilms and sediments. Mechanism analysis confirmed that the dosed nitrite at a relatively low level did not cause the inhibition of sulfidogenic process due to the downward migration of activity zones in sewer sediments. Therefore, the proposed "microbial utilization" concept offers a new alternative for simultaneous removal of sulfide and methane in sewers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11277765PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wroa.2024.100231DOI Listing

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