Enhancing the removal of pollutants from coke wastewater by bioaugmentation: a scoping study

Date

2018-02-09

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Volume Title

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Type

Article

ISSN

0268-2575

Format

Citation

Eleanor Raper, Tom Stephenson, Francisco Simões et al. Enhancing the removal of pollutants from coke wastewater by bioaugmentation: a scoping study. Journal of Chemical Technology and Biotechnology, Volume 93, Issue 9, September 2018, pp. 2535-2543

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Bioaugmentation and biostimulation were investigated for their ability to improve the removal of thiocyanate (SCN-), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), phenol and trace metals in coke wastewater. Additionally, the ability of the microorganisms supplemented with the bioaugmentation product to survive in a simulated river water discharge was evaluated.

RESULTS

A commercially available bioaugmentation product composed mainly of Bacillus sp. was mixed with activated sludge biomass. A dose of 0.5 g/L increased the removal of Ʃ6PAHs (sum of fluoranthene, benzo[b]fluoranthene, benzo[k]fluoranthene, benzo[a]pyrene, indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene and benzo[g,h,i]perylene) by 51% and reduced SCN- below 4 mg/L enabling compliance with the EU Industrial Emissions Directive (IED). Biostimulation (supplementing micronutrients and alkalinity) allowed compliance for both SCN- and phenol (<0.5 mg/L).

Bacillus sp. accounted for 4.4% of the microbial population after 25 hours (1.5 g/L dose) which declined to 0.06% after exposure to river water (24 hours). Exposure of the activated sludge biomass to river water resulted in a 98.6% decline in viable cell counts.

CONCLUSION

To comply with the IED, bioaugmentation and biostimulation are recommended for the treatment of coke wastewater to enable an effluent Ʃ6PAHs of 6.6 μg/L, 0.3 mg/L phenol and 1.2 mg/L SCN-. Such techniques are not anticipated to impact on downstream river water quality.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Bioaugmentation, Biostimulation, Thiocyanate, Phenol, Trace metals, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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