TY - JOUR
T1 - Polishing micropollutants in municipal wastewater, using biogenic manganese oxides in a moving bed biofilm reactor (BioMn-MBBR)
AU - Wang, Guochen
AU - Hambly, Adam C.
AU - Dou, Yibo
AU - Wang, Guan
AU - Tang, Kai
AU - Andersen, Henrik R.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Conventional wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) cannot remove organic
micropollutants efficiently, and thus various polishing processes are
increasingly being studied. One such potential process is utilising
biogenic manganese oxides (BioMnOx). The present study operated two
moving bed biofilm reactors (MBBRs) with synthetic sewage as feed, one
reactor feed was spiked with Mn(II) which allowed the continuous
formation of BioMnOx by Mn-oxidising bacteria in the suspended biofilms
(i.e. BioMn-MBBR). Spiking experiments with 14 micropollutants were
conducted to investigate if BioMnOx combined with MBBR could be utilised
to polish micropollutants in wastewater treatment. Results show
enhanced removal by BioMn-MBBR over control MBBR (without BioMnOx) for
specific micropollutants, such as diclofenac (36% vs. 5%) and
sulfamethoxazole (80% vs. 24%). However, diclofenac removal was
significantly inhibited when municipal wastewater was fed, and a further
batch experiment demonstrates the reduced removal of diclofenac could
be due to (unusual) higher pH in municipal wastewater compared to
synthetic sewage. A shift in bacterial community was also observe in
BioMn-MBBR over long-term operation. Overall, BioMn-MBBR in this study
shows great potential for practical application in removing a larger
range of micropollutants, which could be applied as an efficient
polishing step for typical municipal wastewater.
AB - Conventional wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) cannot remove organic
micropollutants efficiently, and thus various polishing processes are
increasingly being studied. One such potential process is utilising
biogenic manganese oxides (BioMnOx). The present study operated two
moving bed biofilm reactors (MBBRs) with synthetic sewage as feed, one
reactor feed was spiked with Mn(II) which allowed the continuous
formation of BioMnOx by Mn-oxidising bacteria in the suspended biofilms
(i.e. BioMn-MBBR). Spiking experiments with 14 micropollutants were
conducted to investigate if BioMnOx combined with MBBR could be utilised
to polish micropollutants in wastewater treatment. Results show
enhanced removal by BioMn-MBBR over control MBBR (without BioMnOx) for
specific micropollutants, such as diclofenac (36% vs. 5%) and
sulfamethoxazole (80% vs. 24%). However, diclofenac removal was
significantly inhibited when municipal wastewater was fed, and a further
batch experiment demonstrates the reduced removal of diclofenac could
be due to (unusual) higher pH in municipal wastewater compared to
synthetic sewage. A shift in bacterial community was also observe in
BioMn-MBBR over long-term operation. Overall, BioMn-MBBR in this study
shows great potential for practical application in removing a larger
range of micropollutants, which could be applied as an efficient
polishing step for typical municipal wastewater.
KW - Micropollutants
KW - Moving bed biofilm reactor
KW - Biogenic manganese oxides
KW - Polishing
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127889
DO - 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127889
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 34863559
SN - 0304-3894
VL - 427
SP - 13
JO - Journal of Hazardous Materials
JF - Journal of Hazardous Materials
M1 - 127889
ER -