Bioresource Technology: Beni Lew, Sheldon Tarre, Michael Beliavski, Michal Green
Bioresource Technology: Beni Lew, Sheldon Tarre, Michael Beliavski, Michal Green
Bioresource Technology: Beni Lew, Sheldon Tarre, Michael Beliavski, Michal Green
Bioresource Technology
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/biortech
a r t i c l e
i n f o
Article history:
Received 13 January 2009
Received in revised form 21 June 2009
Accepted 22 June 2009
Available online 14 August 2009
Keywords:
Anaerobic treatment
Degradation kinetics
Degradation pathway
Domestic wastewater
Temperature effect
a b s t r a c t
The effect of temperatures below 20 C (20, 15 and 10 C) on the anaerobic degradation pathway and
kinetics of domestic wastewater fractionated at different sizes was studied in a uidized-bed batch reactor. The overall degradation pathway was characterized by a soluble fraction degrading according to
zero-order kinetics and a colloidal fraction (between 0.45 and 4.5 lm) that rst disintegrates into a
particulate fraction smaller than 0.45 lm before nally degrading. The colloidal degradation processes
follow a rst-order kinetic. In contrast, suspended solids (bigger than 4.5 lm) degrade to soluble and
colloidal fractions according to rst-order kinetics. The colloidal fraction originating from suspended
solids further degrades into soluble fraction. These soluble fractions have the same degradation kinetics
as the original soluble fraction. The suspended solids degradation was highly affected by temperature,
whereas the soluble fraction slightly affected and the colloidal fraction was not affected at all. On the
other hand, the colloidal non-degradable fraction increased signicantly with the decrease in temperature while the suspended solids slowly increased. The soluble non-degradable fraction was little affected
by temperatures changes.
2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Anaerobic treatment of domestic wastewater is an attractive
option for secondary wastewater treatment. The high costs of aeration and sludge handling associated with aerobic sewage treatment are lower. However, domestic wastewater has typically low
concentrations of COD, resulting in relatively small methane production that is insufcient to heat the reactor to more favorable
mesophilic temperatures. The relatively higher concentration of
particulate matter in domestic wastewater has low degradation
rates at psychrophilic temperatures (Elmitwalli et al., 2001; Lew
et al., 2003; Singh and Viraraghavan, 2002). Therefore, anaerobic
process efciency is dependent on local ambient temperatures.
At tropical temperatures, intensive anaerobic systems have
been successfully applied and found wide acceptance for domestic
wastewater treatment. COD removals above 70% have been observed by several authors (Chernicharo and Cardoso, 1999; Kalogo
and Verstraete, 2000; Lew et al., 2003). At lower ambient temperatures, the application of anaerobic reactors for domestic wastewater treatment has been studied only in lab and pilot scale plants
(Lettinga et al., 1981; Lew et al., 2004; Seghezzo et al., 1998). Dete-
6156
addition, at each temperature a major increase in the total COD removal was observed when increasing retention times shorter than
15 h. For retention times longer than 15 h, further increases in
retention time led to a minor increase in the total COD removal.
Based on the data available on degradation and degradability of
wastewater under anaerobic conditions various digestion models
have been built and can be found in the literature, each of them having its own potential and worth. No unied modeling framework for
the anaerobic digestion process exists, however, the model mostly
used today for anaerobic digestion processes is the ADM1 (Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1), developed by the IWA anaerobic digestion modeling task-group (Batstone et al., 2002). The ADM1
provides an excellent generic model structure and parameterization
to characterize anaerobic process dynamics under various reactor
congurations and feeding protocols and can be employed to investigate the relationship between digester stability and acetoclastic
methanogenic population dynamics. However, the model assumes
a single type of particulate matter and relatively high temperatures.
In this study, the anaerobic degradation (pathway, biodegradability and kinetics constants) of domestic wastewater at different
low temperatures is conducted in a uidized-bed reactor. An arbitrary division of the particulate matter into two fractions based on
size is made, suspended solids (greater than 4.5 lm) and colloidal
particles (from 0.45 to 4.5 lm). This division is applied in order to
study the effect of colloidal particles on anaerobic degradation
kinetics and develop a more comprehensive model. A single
domestic wastewater soluble fraction is assumed (smaller than
0.45 lm) and its degradation was also studied.
2. Methods
2.1. Fluidized-bed reactor (FBR)
Two batch uidized-bed reactors (FBR) were constructed of
plexiglass with a working volume of 3.1 l (5.0 cm diameter,
150.0 cm height). The reactors were lled with 400 ml sinter glass
carrier (1.02.0 mm diameter) and fed with domestic wastewater
after primary sedimentation from the Neve Shaanan neighborhood
located in Haifa, at the given constant experimental temperature.
The wastewater can be classied as a medium strength domestic
wastewater and its characteristics after primary sedimentation
are given in Table 1. A pump provided for constant wastewater
recirculation and uidization of the biolm covered sinter glass
particles at 20 m/h upow velocity.
For each experimental temperature (20, 15 and 10 C) a start-up
period of at least three months was conducted in order for the
Table 1
Characteristics of domestic wastewater from Neve Shaanan neighborhood after
primary sedimentation.
Parameter
Unit
Average
St. Dev.
BOD
Total COD
Suspended solids COD
Colloidal COD
Soluble COD
TSS
VSS
Total protein
Suspended solids protein
Colloidal protein
Soluble protein
Total carbohydrate
Suspended solids carbohydrate
Colloidal carbohydrate
Soluble carbohydrate
Ammonia
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
mg/l
290.0
566.0
326.6
94.7
214.0
211.2
189.3
276.8
153.2
42.9
86.1
65.9
23.3
20.0
22.6
39.2
110.0
242.8
80.8
16.8
48.0
115.9
90.3
17.3
10.8
26.7
34.2
49.9
27.1
40.0
23.5
7.8
reactors to reach steady-state conditions (van der Last and Lettinga, 1992; Zakkour et al., 2001). During the start-up period the
FB reactors were continuously operated at a retention time of 6 h
and fed with domestic wastewater.
2.2. The experimental procedure
At the end of the start-up period (3 months), experiments were
carried out in duplicate with the reactors operated in batch mode
for 24 h, with continuous recirculation of wastewater at 20 m/h
upow velocity. Before the beginning of each experiment, the reactor was lled three times with the appropriate substrate at intervals of 15 min between each lling. The purpose of this
procedure was to provide maximum adsorption of suspended solids and substrate to the biolm before starting the experiment.
For each temperature, the experiments were conducted with
the same wastewater ltered at different sizes: (a) with the soluble
fraction only (domestic wastewater ltered at 0.45 lm); (b) with
soluble and colloidal fractions (domestic wastewater ltered at
4.5 lm); and (c) with the raw original domestic wastewater. In this
way, the rst experiment with the soluble fraction is carried out
without the interference of bigger fractions. The soluble degradation rate was calculated assuming zero-order kinetics based on
the constant decrease in the soluble concentration with time:
dS
kt
Xdt
dP
ktP Pn
dt
alternative pathways: A) degradation constant similar to the original degradable colloidal; (B) degradation rate constant different to
the original degradable colloidal; (C) part of it is non-degradable;
and (D) suspended solids degradation leads to soluble formation
(directly). Each assumption can be considered by itself or coupled
with others.
The colloidal fraction originating from suspended solids can undergo a new extracellular step and also becoming soluble fraction
(indirectly). Four different assumptions for the degradation of soluble originating from suspended solids (direct and indirect) were
undertaken: similar to that of original soluble; similar to that of
soluble fraction originating from colloidal degraded; part of the
soluble is non-degradable; and different than that of the original
soluble and the soluble originating from colloidal degraded. Each
assumption was considered by itself or coupled with others, for
direct and indirect soluble fractions originating from suspended
solids.
At all temperatures studied a similar microorganism concentration was used, about 21.8 g VSS/l sinter glass, or 2.8 g VSS/l reactor.
2.3. Analysis
Collected samples were tested on a regular basis for COD, TSS
and VSS. All samples were ltered and diluted whenever necessary
and all were performed according to standard methods for the
examination of water and wastewater (APHA, 1995). Filtered sample was measured from samples after ltration through 4.5 lm lter paper (Schleicher & Schuell 595). Soluble sample was measured
from samples after ltration in a 0.45 lm membrane lter. The
suspended solids and colloidal concentration were calculated by
the differences between total and ltered samples; ltered and soluble samples, respectively.
Reactor biomass concentration (TSS and VSS) and uorescent
in situ hybridization (FISH) were carried out at the end of each
experiment at each temperature on the sinter glass. The FISH protocol described by Amann et al. (1990) was used. Microorganism
communities in the reactor were investigated by using Cy3 or
Cy5 labeled r-RNA targeted oligonucleotide probes purchased from
Proligo for Eubacteria (EUB338 GCTGCCTCCCGTAGGAGT) and
Archaea (ARC915 GTGCTCCCCCGCCAATTCCT) domains and; for
acetoclastic methanogenic: methanosaeta (MX825 TCGCACCGTGGCCGACACCTAGC) and methanosarcina species (SARCI551 ACCAATAATCACGATCAC). The NON338 probe (ACTCCTACGGGAGGCAGC)
was used as a control probe for EUB338.
Specic microorganism populations were quantied by cell area
measurement in CLSM images and results were expressed as percentage share of the total microorganism cell area, which was
determined after 40 ,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) stained
cells. Both DAPI and hybridization results were examined by an
epiuorescence microscope Zeiss Axioskop. 10 microscope elds
200
180
160
140
120
10 C
100
80
15 C
60
20 C
40
20
0
10
Time (h)
15
20
6157
COD (mg/l)
6158
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
20 C
10
12
Time (h)
COD (mg/l)
200
15 C
150
100
50
0
0
10
Time (h)
15
20
COD (mg/l)
200
25
10 C
150
100
50
0
0
10
15
20
25
Time (h)
Fig. 2. Soluble (dashed line with open circles) and colloidal (full line with solid diamond) fractions degradation with time at 20, 15 and 10 C.
300
20 C
COD (mg/l)
250
200
150
100
50
0
0
10
15
20
25
Time (h)
250
15 C
COD (mg/l)
200
150
100
50
0
0
10
15
20
25
Time (h)
COD (mg/l)
200
10 C
150
100
50
0
0
10
Time (h)
15
20
25
Fig. 3. Soluble (dashed line with open circles), colloidal (full line with solid diamond) and suspended solids (dashed line with open squares) fractions degradation with time
at 20, 15 and 10 C.
6159
approaches to analyze the kinetics of the degradable soluble material originating from the colloidal fraction were: (1) assuming the
same degradation kinetics as the soluble fraction from Fig. 1 (original soluble material); and (2) assuming a different degradation kinetic than the original soluble material.
In the rst approach to take in consideration the soluble concentration rise observed at 20 C after 5 h (Fig. 2), a high fraction
(62%) of non-degradable soluble originating from colloidal must
be assumed, however, this value does not t other experimental
data at this temperature.
The second approach (rst-order degradation) is supported by
the heterogeneous nature of domestic wastewater (Table 1). The
soluble fraction is mainly composed of proteins, while the colloidal
fraction is composed of carbohydrates and proteins of similar concentrations. Colloidal particles disintegrate in to particulate fractions smaller than 0.45 lm that are not actually soluble and still
need to be further hydrolyzed and degraded according to different
rst-order kinetic constants.
Based on this assumption, the highest R2 (higher than 0.98) between model and experimental data was observed for a rst-order
degradation constant of 4.92, 2.04 and 1.20 d1 for the soluble
originating from colloidal material at 20, 15 and 10 C, respectively. Similar rst-order constants for extracellular degradation
were observed by others (Eastman and Ferguson, 1981; Feng
et al., 2005; Straub et al., 2005). Due to the high R2, the logic of
the basic assumption and the suitability to other experiments with
the original domestic wastewater and other domestic wastewater
samples, this approach was assumed to be the correct biodegradation pathway.
3.3. Unseparated domestic wastewater suspended solids, colloidal
and soluble fractions
The third experiment in the FBR reactor was conducted using
unseparated domestic wastewater. In the experiments conducted
at 20 C (Fig. 3), the concentration of the suspended solids fraction
remained constant in the rst 2 h. After the rst 2 h, the concentration decreased in a rst-order like fashion until the end of the
experiment. A rst-order decrease was also observed at 15 and
10 C, but from the beginning of the experiments. The suspended
solids fraction, like the colloidal one, is considered to be particulate
matter composed of a non-degradable fraction and one that must
pass an extracellular degradation step that obeys rst-order kinetics. A suspended solids non-degradable fraction of 13%, 26% and
38% and rst-order extracellular process rate constant of 4.97,
3.00 and 1.00 d1 were calculated for 20, 15 and 10 C, respectively. Similar non-degradable fractions and rst-order extracellu-
Table 2
Kinetics parameters calculated from the different degradation pathways of colloidal originating from suspended solids.
T (C)
Pathway
Assumptions
R2
k (d1)
Colloidal non-degradable
Sol
20
I
II
III
IV
A, C
B, C
A, C, D
B, D
0.206
0.498
0.898
0.968
4.65a
2.40
4.65a
4.60
0
60%
5%
0
100
40
55
56
0
0
40%
44%
15
I
II
III
IV
A, C
B, C
A, C, D
B, D
0.659
0.630
0.913
0.984
4.59a
2.4
4.59a
2.00
23%
0
29%
0
77
100
51
70
0
0
20%
30%
10
I
II
III
IV
A, C
B, C
A, C, D
B, D
0.790
0.775
0.934
0.996
4.10a
1.20
4.10a
1.30
20%
30%
35%
0
80
70
30
70
0
0
35%
30%
From SS to
6160
Table 3
Kinetics parameters calculated from the different degradation pathways of soluble originating from suspended solids direct and indirect.
T (C)
Pathway
R2
K(direct)
a
K(indirect)
a
Non-degradable (direct)
Non-degradable (indirect)
20
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
0.973
0.432
0.946
0.939
0.906
0.922
0.927
0.26
4.92 d1,b
0.26a
4.92 d1,b
26.4 d1
19.2 d1
18.24 d1
0.26
4.92 d-1,b
4.92 d1,b
0.26a
4.92 d1,b
19.2 d1
9.12 d1
2%
0
0
7%
0
7.5%
0
20%
0
0
3%
0
7.5%
0
15
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
0.969
0.927
0.902
0.918
0.964
0.903
0.954
0.18a
2.04 d1,b
0.18a
2.04 d1,b
6.24 d1
4.8 d1
2.4 d1
0.18a
2.04 d1,b
2.04 d1,b
0.18a
2.04 d1,b
4.8 d1
7.2 d1
3%
0
0
8%
0
5%
0
22%
0
0
0
0
5%
0
10
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
0.974
0.932
0.948
0.874
0.893
0.923
0.905
0.12a
1.20 d1,b
0.12a
1.20 d1,b
0.72 d1
0.72 d1
0.72 d1
0.12a
1.20 d1,b
1.20 d1,b
0.12a
1.20 d1,b
0.72 d1
0.72 d1
4%
0
0
8%
0
0
0
28%
0
0
0
0
0
0
a
b
Previously calculated from the degradation of the original soluble fraction-unit: g COD gVSS1 d1.
Previously calculated from the degradation of the soluble originating from colloidal.
SSdegradable
0.9%
20 C
56.0%
Colldegradable
Colldegradable from SS
43.1%
21.0%
79.0%
Solnon-degradalbe
Soldegradable from SS
Soldegradable
Degradation
SSdegradable
1.5%
15 C
70.0%
Colldegradable
Colldegradable from SS
28.5%
20.0%
80.0%
Solnon-degradalbe
Soldegradable from SS
Soldegradable
Degradation
SSdegradable
1.8%
10 C
70.0%
Colldegradable
Colldegradable from SS
21.0%
30.0%
70.0%
Solnon-degradalbe
Soldegradable from SS
Soldegradable
Degradation
Fig. 4. Fate of the different wastewater fractions at 20, 15 and 10 C.
6161
Unit
20 C
15 C
10 C
SS
d1
%
d1
%
d1
%
g COD g VSS1 d1
%
g COD g VSS1 d1
%
g COD g VSS1 d1
%
d1
%
4.63(0.53)
18(6)
4.65(0.78)
13(3)
4.65(0.78)
0(0)
0.30(0.04)
13(4)
0.30(0.04)
2(2)
0.30(0.04)
21(7)
4.92(0.94)
0(0)
3.01(0.02)
29(2)
4.57(0.13)
27(6)
2.00(0.42)
0(0)
0.16(0.04)
13(4)
0.16(0.04)
5(3)
0.16(0.04)
20(1)
2.04(0.57)
0(0)
1.06(0.06)
39(10)
4.08(0.37)
45(6)
1.32(0.36)
0(0)
0.13(0.03)
16(4)
0.13(0.03)
6(3)
0.13(0.03)
30(1)
1.20(0.20)
0(0)
Coll original
Coll from SS
Sol original
Sol direct from SS
Sol indirect from SS
Sol from Coll
Table 5
Temperature activity coefcient of the degradation constant, the equations derived
from curve tting for the non-degradable fraction and for the percentage pathway for
the different domestic wastewater fractions at temperatures between 10 and 20 C.
original colloidal fraction is not listed in Table 5 because no temperature dependence was found.
The highest temperature coefcient was observed for the degradation rate of suspended solids fraction, 1.160, indicating that suspended solids degradation was the most sensitive process to
temperature change. Moreover, the temperature coefcient observed for degradation of the three different particulates (suspended solids, colloidal originating from suspended solids and
soluble originating from colloidal) are higher than the soluble fraction (1.079), the substrate assumed for methanogenesis. These results are in accordance with others (Lew et al., 2003 and Gujer and
Zehnder, 1983).
The inuence of temperature on anaerobic processes is not limited to the reaction rate, but also reects the extent of the anaerobic degradation process. The temperature effect on kinetic
parameters is governed by the free energy law, however, the temperature effect on the non-degradable fraction itself and on each
pathways percentage are calculated based on the best curve tting. The particulate matter non-degradable fraction increases with
the decrease in temperature, with the colloidal fraction being the
most affected by temperature changes. The increase in the nondegradable colloidal fraction was about twice the increase in the
non-degradable suspended solids fraction. In contrast, experimental results show that the original soluble non-degradable fraction
stayed the same.
3.5. Temperature inuence on microorganism population
Quantication of microbial groups expressed as percentages in
the FBR at different temperatures (20, 15 and 10 C) is listed in
Table 6. Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) and DAPI results
showed a decrease in microorganism viability (total archaea and
eubacteria counted by FISH as opposed to the DAPI count) with
the decrease in temperature, from 40% at 20 C to 18% at 10 C.
Although the results are qualitative, they suggest that at lower
temperature a lower concentration of viable microorganisms is
present in the reactor. Probably a higher amount of microorganisms is present in the reactor at lower temperatures.
FISH results show that archaeal cells dominated at all temperatures studied, around 70% of the total active microorganisms. A
slight decrease in archaeal cells with the decrease in temperature
was observed, from 76% at 20 C to 68% at 10 C. Similar results
were observed by Gomec et al. (2004). Probably temperature
changes between 20 to 10 C have little affect on microorganisms
ratio in an anaerobic reactor treating domestic wastewater.
It was also observed that acetoclastic methanosaeta species
(MX825) were the major methanogenic archaea present at all temperatures studied, around 84% of ARC915, with almost no change
with temperature decrease. This high acetoclastic species concentration can be explained by the fact that seventy percent of the
methane produced in anaerobic processes comes from the decarboxylation of acetate. Similar results of methanosaeta species
being the major archaea present in anaerobic sludge treating
domestic wastewater has been observed by others (Araujo et al.,
2001; Sanz et al., 2002). No acetoclastic methanosarcinaceae species (SARCI551) were observed at all temperatures studied.
Fraction
Temperature
activity coefcient
Nondegradable
fraction
% Pathway
Suspended solids
Original colloidal
Colloidal from suspended
solids
Original soluble
Soluble direct from
suspended solids
Soluble indirect from
suspended solids
Soluble from colloidal
1.160
1.124
2.1 T + 60.2
3.2 T + 76.3
1.4 T + 86.3
1.079
1.079
0.3 T + 18.5
0.4 T + 10.3
2.2 T 2.3
Temperature
1.079
0.9 T + 37.2
0.5 T + 56.9
1.141
10 C
15 C
20 C
Table 6
FISH results at different temperatures.
Viability
40.4 (2.0)
29.4 (5.5)
17.7 (5.5)
Viable microorganisms
% Eubacteria
% Archaea
25.4 (3.5)
28.9 (3.3)
32.2 (2.7)
74.6 (3.5)
71.1 (3.3)
67.8 (2.7)
Methanosaeta
% of Archaea
88.0 (5.3)
81.5 (3.1)
85.7 (4.2)
6162
4. Conclusions
The importance of considering multiple types of particulate
matter at low temperatures is shown. The colloidal fraction rst
disintegrates (a physical process not affected by temperature) into
a particulate fraction smaller than 4.5 lm before nally being degraded, both processes in a rst-order manner. Suspended solids
partly degrades into soluble fraction and partly to colloidal degradable fraction, which further degrades to soluble. Soluble originating from suspended solids degrades with degradation kinetics
similar to the original soluble fraction. The same overall degradation pathway was found to t experimental data for all temperatures studied with the only difference being the percentage of
material going to each pathway and the degradation kinetic
constants.
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