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Linking biofilm growth to fouling and aeration performance of fine-pore diffuser in activated sludge

Authors
Garrido-Baserba, ManelAsvapathanagul, PitipornMcCarthy, Graham W.Gocke, Thomas E.Olson, Betty H.Park, Hee-DeungAl-Omari, AhmedMurthy, SudhirBott, Charles B.Wett, BernhardSmeraldi, Joshua D.Shaw, Andrew R.Rosso, Diego
Issue Date
1-Mar-2016
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
Aeration; Fouling; Fine-pore diffuser; Biofilm; Activated sludge; Efficiency
Citation
WATER RESEARCH, v.90, pp.317 - 328
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
WATER RESEARCH
Volume
90
Start Page
317
End Page
328
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/89250
DOI
10.1016/j.watres.2015.12.011
ISSN
0043-1354
Abstract
Aeration is commonly identified as the largest contributor to process energy needs in the treatment of wastewater and therefore garners significant focus in reducing energy use. Fine-pore diffusers are the most common aeration system in municipal wastewater treatment. These diffusers are subject to fouling and scaling, resulting in loss in transfer efficiency as biofilms form and change material properties producing larger bubbles, hindering mass transfer and contributing to increased plant energy costs. This research establishes a direct correlation and apparent mechanistic link between biofilm DNA concentration and reduced aeration efficiency caused by biofilm fouling. Although the connection between biofilm growth and fouling has been implicit in discussions of diffuser fouling for many years, this research provides measured quantitative connection between the extent of biofouling and reduced diffuser efficiency. This was clearly established by studying systematically the deterioration of aeration diffusers efficiency during a 1.5 year period, concurrently with the microbiological study of the biofilm fouling in order to understand the major factors contributing to diffuser fouling. The six different diffuser technologies analyzed in this paper included four different materials which were ethylene-propylenediene monomer (EPDM), polyurethane, silicone and ceramic. While all diffusers foul eventually, some novel materials exhibited fouling resistance. The material type played a major role in determining the biofilm characteristics (i.e., growth rate, composition, and microbial density) which directly affected the rate and intensity at what the diffusers were fouled, whereas diffuser geometry exerted little influence. Overall, a high correlation between the increase in biofilm DNA and the decrease in alpha F was evident (CV < 14.0 +/- 2.0%). By linking bacterial growth with aeration efficiency, the research was able to show quantitatively the causal connection between bacterial fouling and energy wastage during aeration. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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