Abstract
Sulfate (SO42-) can be an electron acceptor for ammonium nitrogen (NH4+) oxidation under anaerobic conditions. The process is known as sulfammox and can be a viable alternative to conventional, nitrite (NO2-) dependent, anammox. Two bacterial species, including Bacillus Benzoevorans and Brocadia Anammoxoglobus Sulfate, can perform that process. With sulfammox, an economically inefficient pre-nitration step (due to aeration) is not required. There are more than 10 different systems in which sulfammox has been studied, including suspended growth, biofilm, granular and hybrid reactors. A combination of anammox and sulfur related processes (sulfammox and autotrophic denitrification) would especially be appropriate for specific industrial wastewater with high content of nitrogen compounds and SO42-. The results of recent studies suggest that very high removal efficiencies could simultaneously be achieved with respect to both NH4+ (92-99%) and SO42- (53-60%).
Citations
-
2 7
CrossRef
-
0
Web of Science
-
3 8
Scopus
Authors (3)
Cite as
Full text
- Publication version
- Accepted or Published Version
- License
- open in new tab
Keywords
Details
- Category:
- Articles
- Type:
- artykuły w czasopismach
- Published in:
-
Environmental Technology & Innovation
no. 22,
ISSN: 2352-1864 - Language:
- English
- Publication year:
- 2021
- Bibliographic description:
- Grubba D., Majtacz J., Mąkinia J.: Sulfate reducing ammonium oxidation (SULFAMMOX) process under anaerobic conditions// Environmental Technology & Innovation -Vol. 22, (2021), s.101416-
- DOI:
- Digital Object Identifier (open in new tab) 10.1016/j.eti.2021.101416
- Verified by:
- Gdańsk University of Technology
seen 189 times