Title of article
Comparison of conventional and two-stage reversible flow, static-bed biodenitrification reactors
Author/Authors
Bryan L Woodbury، نويسنده , , Mohamed Yehia Dahab، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
9
From page
1563
To page
1571
Abstract
This paper compares the operation of a traditional single-stage system with a two-stage, reversible flow biodenitrification system for removing nitrates from drinking water. The purpose of this study was to investigate the ability of these two-stage systems to remove nitrate and residual organics from treated water as compared to single-stage units. In the reversible flow system, the second-stage (i.e. follow) reactor is operated in series with the first-stage (i.e. lead) reactor. After a given period of operation, the flow regime is reversed so that the follow reactor becomes the lead one and vice versa. The active solids remaining in the follow reactor (previously the lead one) are capable of removing residual soluble organics and nitrates to levels below the concentrations provided by single-stage units particularly at HRTs as low as 0.5 h. Nitrate-nitrogen removal efficiency improved slightly from 98 to 99.5% for the single- and two-stage systems, respectively. Most notably, reversible flow reactors were found to reduce long-term effluent residual organics concentrations with an average of approximately 1/3 that of the single-stage system. Also the reversible flow system, with its design redundancy, demonstrated the ability to receive extreme shock loads with no sustained loss of treatment efficiency.
Keywords
biodenitrification , fixed-film , static-bed , nitrate , nitrogen , groundwatercontamination , reversible-flow
Journal title
Water Research
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Water Research
Record number
767880
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