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Denitrification of Recirculating Aquaculture System Waters Using an Upflow Biofilter and a Fermented Substrate

The ability of an upflow, denitrifying biofilter using a fermentation generated carbon source to treat the high nitrate concentrations typically seen in recirculating aquaculture systems was studied using a synthetic nitrate wastewater supplied at two nitrate loadings, 1.13 and 2.52 kg NO3-N/m3/day. A supplemental carbon source was provided primarily through the fermentation of fish food which generated volatile fatty acids (VFA) in the form of acetic, propionic, isobutyric, n-butyric, 2-methylbutyric, 3-methylbutyric, and n-valeric acids. Acetic and propionic acids were the predominant constituents generated, while lower concentrations of the longer carbon chain butyric and valeric acids were produced. The VFAs proved to be a viable carbon source for the denitrification process as indicated by the ability of the biofilm to assimilate all of the constituents generated. Carbon limiting the system resulted in an increase in effluent nitrite and incomplete nitrate removal. During the low nitrate loading condition, influent COD to NO₃-N ratios greater than 5 typically achieved high total nitrogen removals greater than 95%. This influent ratio corresponded with a COD to NOx -N consumption ratio of 4.62 ± 0.28 mg/L as COD per mg/L as N for complete nitrogen removal. Under the high nitrate loading condition, influent COD to NO₃-N ratios achieving high nitrogen removals showed great variability and did not correspond to a distinct value. The COD to NOx -N consumption ratios were often below stoichiometric values, which was attributed to the hydrolysis of influent fermentation solids captured within the column to generate a COD source not measured by filtered samples. The column biofilm kinetics were modeled using a half-order reaction rate and denitrification coefficients (k) of 0.70 ± 0.02 (mg NOx-N/L)1/2 / min and 1.18 ± 0.12 (NOx-N /L)1/2 / min were determined for the low and high nitrate loading phases, respectively. / Master of Science

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/31068
Date14 January 1998
CreatorsPhillips, Jennifer Brooke
ContributorsEnvironmental Engineering, Love, Nancy G., Libey, George S., Novak, John T., Boardman, Gregory D.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
RelationJBP-ETD.pdf

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