Title of article :
Effects of oxygen on biodegradation of benzoate and 3-chlorobenzoate in a denitrifying chemostat
Author/Authors :
Timur Deniz، نويسنده , , Surhan Ozer Cinar، نويسنده , , C.P. Leslie Grady Jr، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
11
From page :
4524
To page :
4534
Abstract :
A mixed microbial culture degraded a mixture of benzoate (863 mg/L), 3-chlorobenzoate (3-CB) (69.7 mg/L), and pyruvate (244 mg/L) under denitrifying conditions in a chemostat. Biodegradation under denitrifying conditions was stable, complete (effluent concentrations below detection limits), and proceeded without the production of toxic intermediates like chlorocatechols. The addition of oxygen at mass input rates of 6.2%, 15.5%, and 43.9% of the mass input rate of chemical oxygen demand (COD) (337 mg COD/h) did not induce the synthesis of aerobic biodegradation pathways and thus did not disrupt biodegradation. Rather, the oxygen was used as a terminal electron acceptor, displacing a stoichiometric amount of nitrate, leading to microaerobic conditions (dissolved oxygen concentration <0.050 mg/L) in which oxygen utilization and denitrification occurred simultaneously. The reduction of nitrate occurred fully to N2 gas with no accumulation of nitrite, nitrous oxide, or nitric oxide, although the ability of the culture to transfer electrons to the nitrogen oxides decreased as the oxygen input was increased. The anoxic benzoate uptake capability was unaffected by the increase in oxygen addition, but the anoxic 3-CB uptake capability increased, as did the level of benzoyl-CoA reductase in the cells.
Keywords :
denitrification , Oxygen effect , benzoate , biodegradation , 3-chlorobenzoate
Journal title :
Water Research
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Water Research
Record number :
769256
Link To Document :
بازگشت