Simultaneous heterotrophic and sulfur-oxidizing autotrophic denitrification process for drinking water treatment: Control of sulfate production

Sahinkaya, E; Dursun, N; Kilic, A; Demirel, S; Uyanik, S; Cinar, O

HERO ID

866857

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2011

Language

English

PMID

22030084

HERO ID 866857
In Press No
Year 2011
Title Simultaneous heterotrophic and sulfur-oxidizing autotrophic denitrification process for drinking water treatment: Control of sulfate production
Authors Sahinkaya, E; Dursun, N; Kilic, A; Demirel, S; Uyanik, S; Cinar, O
Journal Water Research
Volume 45
Issue 20
Page Numbers 6661-6667
Abstract A long-term performance of a packed-bed bioreactor containing sulfur and limestone was evaluated for the denitrification of drinking water. Autotrophic denitrification rate was limited by the slow dissolution rate of sulfur and limestone. Dissolution of limestone for alkalinity supplementation increased hardness due to release of Ca(2+). Sulfate production is the main disadvantage of the sulfur autotrophic denitrification process. The effluent sulfate concentration was reduced to values below drinking water guidelines by stimulating the simultaneous heterotrophic and autotrophic denitrification with methanol supplementation. Complete removal of 75 mg/L NO(3)-N with effluent sulfate concentration of around 225 mg/L was achieved when methanol was supplemented at methanol/NO(3)-N ratio of 1.67 (mg/mg), which was much lower than the theoretical value of 2.47 for heterotrophic denitrification. Batch studies showed that sulfur-based autotrophic NO(2)-N reduction rate was around three times lower than the reduction rate of NO(3)-N, which led to NO(2)-N accumulation at high loadings.
Doi 10.1016/j.watres.2011.09.056
Pmid 22030084
Wosid WOS:000298124500006
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science 000298124500006
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Denitrification; Sulfur-limestone autotrophic denitrification; Sulfate; Drinking water
Is Qa No