Title of article :
The effect of maintenance energy requirements on biomass production during wastewater treatment
Author/Authors :
Euan W. Low، نويسنده , , Howard A. Chase، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
The recognition that microorganisms satisfy their maintenance energy requirements in preference to producing additional biomass has revealed possible methods to reducing the generation of excess biomass during wastewater treatment. A relationship describing substrate utilization for maintenance and biomass production in substrate-limited continuous microbial cultures is presented. In continuously-fed, substrate-limited, microbial populations, it is proposed that the biomass production decreases proportionally to biomass concentration. To evaluate the significance of biomass concentration on biomass production, a laboratory chemostat containing Pseudomonas putida grown aerobically was fitted with a second stage in which the biomass in the reactor effluent was concentrated and a portion was recycled to enhance the biomass concentration. Overall substrate removal efficiency remained constant at each of the various biomass concentrations investigated. Increasing biomass concentration from 3 to 6 g l−1 reduced biomass production by 12% and analysis of a similar system observed that increasing biomass concentration from 1.7 g l−1 to 10.3 g l−1 reduced biomass production by 44%. Maintenance energy coefficients and true growth yields for operation both as a chemostat and with biomass recycle were found to be similar; qm=0.027±0.004 g substrate g biomass−1 h−1 and YG=0.359±0.003 g biomass g substrate−1 and qm=0.021±0.008 g substrate g biomass−1 h−1 and YG=0.385±0.022 g biomass g substrate−1, respectively. The relevance of these findings for biomass production in wastewater processes are discussed.
Keywords :
Wastewater , maintenance energy requirements , Biomass production , Activated sludge
Journal title :
Water Research
Journal title :
Water Research