Impact of activated sludge ozonation on filamentous bacteria viability and possible added benefits
(2019) In Environmental Technology 40(20). p.2601-2607- Abstract
- Ozone was applied to return activated sludge in full-scale to study how ozone impacts filamentous bacteria viability (Live/Dead®). Additionally, the ozonated sludges were subjected to anaerobic digestion trials and analysis of micropollutants. Ozone treatment (3-4.8 g O3/kg TSS) improved the settling properties of the sludge by lowering the diluted sludge volume with 7-35%. Ozone inactivated filamentous bacteria outside the floc structures and the fraction of inactivated filaments increased with an increasing ozone dose. It was observed that ozone treatment may act selectively towards different types of filaments. With respect to the two dominating morphotypes present, Type 0041 filamentous bacteria were found to be more resistant to ozone... (More)
- Ozone was applied to return activated sludge in full-scale to study how ozone impacts filamentous bacteria viability (Live/Dead®). Additionally, the ozonated sludges were subjected to anaerobic digestion trials and analysis of micropollutants. Ozone treatment (3-4.8 g O3/kg TSS) improved the settling properties of the sludge by lowering the diluted sludge volume with 7-35%. Ozone inactivated filamentous bacteria outside the floc structures and the fraction of inactivated filaments increased with an increasing ozone dose. It was observed that ozone treatment may act selectively towards different types of filaments. With respect to the two dominating morphotypes present, Type 0041 filamentous bacteria were found to be more resistant to ozone attack than Microthrix parvicella. Thus, higher ozone doses may be required to mitigate sludge bulking caused by Type 0041 filaments. No effects could be discerned by ozone addition on neither the methane production of the sludge nor on the concentrations of micropollutants analysed for this study. The lack of effect on both methane production and micropollutant removal was deemed to be caused by insufficient ozone doses. (Less)
- Abstract (Swedish)
- Ozone was applied to return activated sludge in full-scale to study how ozone impacts filamentous bacteria viability (Live/Dead®). Additionally, the ozonated sludges were subjected to anaerobic digestion trials and analysis of micropollutants. Ozone treatment (3-4.8 g O3/kg TSS) improved the settling properties of the sludge by lowering the diluted sludge volume with 7-35%. Ozone inactivated filamentous bacteria outside the floc structures and the fraction of inactivated filaments increased with an increasing ozone dose. It was observed that ozone treatment may act selectively towards different types of filaments. With respect to the two dominating morphotypes present, Type 0041 filamentous bacteria were found to be more resistant to ozone... (More)
- Ozone was applied to return activated sludge in full-scale to study how ozone impacts filamentous bacteria viability (Live/Dead®). Additionally, the ozonated sludges were subjected to anaerobic digestion trials and analysis of micropollutants. Ozone treatment (3-4.8 g O3/kg TSS) improved the settling properties of the sludge by lowering the diluted sludge volume with 7-35%. Ozone inactivated filamentous bacteria outside the floc structures and the fraction of inactivated filaments increased with an increasing ozone dose. It was observed that ozone treatment may act selectively towards different types of filaments. With respect to the two dominating morphotypes present, Type 0041 filamentous bacteria were found to be more resistant to ozone attack than Mictrothrix parvicella. Thus, higher ozone doses may be required to mitigate sludge bulking caused by Type 0041 filaments. No effects could be discerned by ozone addition on neither the methane production of the sludge nor on the concentrations of micropollutants analysed for this study. The lack of effect on both methane production and micropollutant removal was deemed to be caused by insufficient ozone doses. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/d431abfb-2717-451e-bc59-65445b2cc85f
- author
- Nilsson, Filip LU ; Davidsson, Åsa LU ; Falås, Per LU ; Bengtsson, Simon ; Bester, Kai and Jönsson, Karin LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2019
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Environmental Technology
- volume
- 40
- issue
- 20
- pages
- 11 pages
- publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:29488826
- scopus:85043704370
- ISSN
- 1479-487X
- DOI
- 10.1080/09593330.2018.1447023
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- d431abfb-2717-451e-bc59-65445b2cc85f
- date added to LUP
- 2017-12-14 12:16:37
- date last changed
- 2023-12-02 00:58:43
@article{d431abfb-2717-451e-bc59-65445b2cc85f, abstract = {{Ozone was applied to return activated sludge in full-scale to study how ozone impacts filamentous bacteria viability (Live/Dead®). Additionally, the ozonated sludges were subjected to anaerobic digestion trials and analysis of micropollutants. Ozone treatment (3-4.8 g O3/kg TSS) improved the settling properties of the sludge by lowering the diluted sludge volume with 7-35%. Ozone inactivated filamentous bacteria outside the floc structures and the fraction of inactivated filaments increased with an increasing ozone dose. It was observed that ozone treatment may act selectively towards different types of filaments. With respect to the two dominating morphotypes present, Type 0041 filamentous bacteria were found to be more resistant to ozone attack than Microthrix parvicella. Thus, higher ozone doses may be required to mitigate sludge bulking caused by Type 0041 filaments. No effects could be discerned by ozone addition on neither the methane production of the sludge nor on the concentrations of micropollutants analysed for this study. The lack of effect on both methane production and micropollutant removal was deemed to be caused by insufficient ozone doses.}}, author = {{Nilsson, Filip and Davidsson, Åsa and Falås, Per and Bengtsson, Simon and Bester, Kai and Jönsson, Karin}}, issn = {{1479-487X}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{20}}, pages = {{2601--2607}}, publisher = {{Taylor & Francis}}, series = {{Environmental Technology}}, title = {{Impact of activated sludge ozonation on filamentous bacteria viability and possible added benefits}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09593330.2018.1447023}}, doi = {{10.1080/09593330.2018.1447023}}, volume = {{40}}, year = {{2019}}, }