Bioaugmenting Bioreactors for the Continuous Removal of 3-Chloroaniline by a Slow Release Approach

The survival and activity of microbial degradative inoculants in bioreactors is critical to obtain successful biodegradation of non- or slowly degradable pollutants. Achieving this in industrial wastewater reactors is technically challenging. We evaluated a strategy to obtain complete and stable bio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2002-11, Vol.36 (21), p.4698-4704
Hauptverfasser: Boon, Nico, De Gelder, Leen, Lievens, Hanne, Siciliano, Steven D, Top, Eva M, Verstraete, Willy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The survival and activity of microbial degradative inoculants in bioreactors is critical to obtain successful biodegradation of non- or slowly degradable pollutants. Achieving this in industrial wastewater reactors is technically challenging. We evaluated a strategy to obtain complete and stable bioaugmentation of activated sludge, which is used to treat a 3-chloroaniline (3-CA) contaminated wastewater in a lab-scale semi-continuous activated sludge system. A 3-CA metabolizing bacterium, Comamonas testosteroni strain I2, was mixed with molten agar and encapsulated in 4 mm diameter open-ended silicone tubes of 3 cm long. The tubes containing the immobilized bacteria represented about 1% of the volume of the mixed liquor. The bioaugmentation activity of a reactor containing the immobilized cells was compared with a reactor with suspended I2gfp cells. From day 25−30 after inoculation, the reactor with only suspended cells failed to completely degrade 3-CA because of a decrease in metabolic activity. In the reactors with immobilized cells, however, 3-CA continued to be removed. A mass balance indicated that ca. 10% of the degradation activity was due to the immobilized cells. Slow release of the growing embedded cells from the agar into the activated sludge medium, resulting in a higher number of active 3-CA-degrading I2 cells, was responsible for ca. 90% of the degradation. Our results demonstrate that this simple immobilization procedure was effective to maintain a 3-CA-degrading population within the activated sludge community.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/es020076q