The approach of wastewater treatment has shifted towards a holistic view in order to achieve sustainability in addition to environmental protection. The aerobic granular sludge (AGS) technology, which relies on the use of fast-settling granular biofilms called granules, is progressively becoming a new standard for high-rate biological nutrient removal (BNR) and secondary clarification in single sequencing batch reactors (SBR). The AGS intensive process has been related with definite savings in land area, construction, and operation costs. In an economical analysis, theoretical savings of CHF 0.45 per m3 (1 Swiss franc CHF ≈ 0.83 €) were computed for a Swiss wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) of 200’000 capita removing all nutrients biologically. Besides scale-up, fundamental research was required to understand and tailor the structure of underlying bacterial communities that form granules and remove nutrients. Mechanisms of bacterial selection were investigated in a systems approach to propose strategic axes for optimal management of the bacterial resource for efficient process performances. This research led to the following advances. After having designed a flexible reactor infrastructure for AGS research, a mathematical modeling methodology was developed to understand the hydraulic and biological processes involved during plug-flow transport of wastewater across the settled AGS bed during the feeding phase. BNR relies on the preferential selection of polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAO) by proper uncoupled supply of electron donors and electron acceptors. A bed height to diameter ratio of 6 was deduced to be optimal for full bed loading and efficient anaerobic acetate uptake under reference simulation conditions (20°C, pH 7.0). A bioinformatics methodology called PyroTRF-ID was developed for the identification of bacterial relatives involved in BNR processes by combination of terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) and pyrosequencing data. This procedure provided high resolution of bacterial community structures and dynamics of AGS systems. Electrical conductivity and polyphosphatase assays were proposed for rapid and low-cost assessment of the fractions of active PAO and of the dephosphatating potential of activated sludge and granular sludge. Positive linear correlations were obtained between the fraction of PAO, the biomass specific rate of conductivity evolution measured in anaerobic metabolic batch tests, and the polyphosphate-hydrolyzing enzymatic activity of cell extracts. Wash-out conditions used to stimulate granule formation were shown to exert a selection pressure not only on physical properties of early-stage granules, but also on the underlying bacterial community composition. Operation with constant volumetric organic loading rates (OLR) during wash-out resulted in the formation of slow-settling fluffy granules dominated by filamentous Burkholderiales affiliates formed under low aeration (< 2 cm s-1) a
Christof Holliger, Aline Sondra Adler, Laetitia Janine Andrée Cardona, Jaspreet Singh Saini, Pilar Natalia Rodilla Ramírez, Ruizhe Pei
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