globalchange  > 影响、适应和脆弱性
项目编号: 1433101
项目名称:
EAGER: Engineering and Testing a Feammox Bacterium for its use in Nitrogen Removal Bioreactors for Wastewater Treatment
作者: Peter Jaffe
承担单位: Princeton University
批准年: 2013
开始日期: 2014-06-01
结束日期: 2015-05-31
资助金额: USD49997
资助来源: US-NSF
项目类别: Standard Grant
国家: US
语种: 英语
特色学科分类: Engineering - Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems
英文关键词: acidimicrobiaceae bacterium a6 ; feammox ; wastewater treatment plant ; nitrogen gas ; treatment plant ; nitrifying bacterium ; anoxic bioreactor ; feammox pathway ; feammox process ; wastewater water ; anammox-based wastewater treatment system ; n removal ; feammox-based process
英文摘要: 1433101
Jaffe

A new pathway for ammonium oxidation coupled to iron reduction in the absence of oxygen and nitrate/nitrite has recently been described by the PI and co-workers for wetland soils in New Jersey, by researchers from UC Berkeley in tropical rainforest soils, and by researchers in Japan in a bioreactor, and has been referred to as Feammox. Further Studies have been conducted in incubations of NJ wetland sediments, confirming that Feammox is a biological process, and that an Acidimicrobiaceae bacterium A6, previously unknown, is responsible for it. Samples have been enriched and the PI has isolated the pure Acidimicrobiaceae bacterium A6 strain. Preliminary results from augmenting an anoxic bioreactor with ferrihydrite and Acidimicrobiaceae bacterium A6 have shown that there is a potential to exploit this process for anaerobic biological ammonium oxidation. Having isolated the Acidimicrobiaceae bacterium A6 raises the potential to determine the functional gene responsible for Feammox and to gain new fundamental insights into this process and its applications.

Virtually all wastewater treatment plants in the developed world as well as in many developing countries oxidize ammonia to nitrate ion, before discharging the treated wastewater. This is done to decrease oxygen demand in the receiving waters. Biological ammonium oxidation is conduced by aerobic (in the presence of oxygen) nitrifying bacteria and requires aeration, the step with the highest energy input in wastewater treatment plants. An alternative is the partial nitrification + Anammox system, which has been implemented in some treatment plants over the past 15 years, with the goal of saving energy costs, since only half of the ammonia is converted to nitrite ion aerobically, while the rest is converted to nitrogen gas anaerobically via Anammox. However, these Anammox-based wastewater treatment systems need to operate at temperatures between 28 and 35 Celsius. In contrast, we have shown that the Feammox pathway is still active at below 10 Celsius. Hence, a Feammox-based process could result in further energy savings, by requiring no aeration or heating of the wastewater water in temperate climates, although the cost of an Fe(III) source will have to be taken into account. Furthermore, N excess in near-shore environments has been identified as a major environmental problem leading to eutrophication and anoxia (Chesapeake Bay, Gulf of Mexico, etc.). Therefore legislation is being drafted which will require conversion of nitrate to nitrogen gas in conventional wastewater treatment plants. Potentially the Feammox process could achieve N removal in a single stage reactor with low energy utilization.
资源类型: 项目
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/96816
Appears in Collections:影响、适应和脆弱性
气候减缓与适应

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Recommended Citation:
Peter Jaffe. EAGER: Engineering and Testing a Feammox Bacterium for its use in Nitrogen Removal Bioreactors for Wastewater Treatment. 2013-01-01.
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