University of Wollongong
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Effects of salinity build-up on biomass characteristics and trace organic chemical removal: Implications on the development of high retention membrane bioreactors

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posted on 2024-11-16, 08:44 authored by Wenhai Luo, Faisal HaiFaisal Hai, Jinguo Kang, William PriceWilliam Price, Wenshan Guo, Hao H Ngo, Kazuo Yamamoto, Long Nghiem
This study investigated the impact of salinity build-up on the performance of membrane bioreactor (MBR), specifically in terms of the removal and fate of trace organic chemicals (TrOCs), nutrient removal, and biomass characteristics. Stepwise increase of the influent salinity, simulating salinity build-up in high retention MBRs, adversely affected the metabolic activity in the bioreactor, thereby reducing organic and nutrient removal. The removal of hydrophilic TrOCs by MBR decreased due to salinity build-up. By contrast, with the exception of 17α-ethynylestradiol, the removal of all hydrophobic TrOCs was not affected at high salinity. Moreover, salinity build-up had negligible impact on the residual accumulation of TrOCs in the sludge phase except for a few hydrophilic compounds. Additionally, the response of the biomass to salinity stress also dramatically enhanced the release of both soluble microbial products (SMP) and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), leading to severe membrane fouling.

Funding

Novel high retention membrane bioreactors for sustainable water reuse: Process performance and optimization

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Luo, W., Hai, F. I., Kang, J., Price, W. E., Guo, W., Ngo, H. H., Yamamoto, K. & Nghiem, L. D. (2015). Effects of salinity build-up on biomass characteristics and trace organic chemical removal: Implications on the development of high retention membrane bioreactors. Bioresource Technology, 177 274-281.

Journal title

Bioresource Technology

Volume

177

Pagination

274-281

Language

English

RIS ID

96861

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