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Biotrickling Filtration for the Reduction of N2O Emitted during Wastewater Treatment: Results from a Long-Term In Situ Pilot-Scale Testing

Authors
Han, HeejooKim, Daehyun D.Song, Min JoonYun, TaehoYoon, HyunLee, Hong WoonKim, Young MoLaureni, MicheleYoon, Sukhwan
Issue Date
Mar-2023
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Keywords
KEYWORDS; nitrous oxide; biotrickling filtration; activated sludge; metagenome; nitrous oxide reductase; in situ pilot test
Citation
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE&TECHNOLOGY, v.57, no.9, pp.3883 - 3892
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE&TECHNOLOGY
Volume
57
Number
9
Start Page
3883
End Page
3892
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/184946
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.2c08818
ISSN
0013-936X
Abstract
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are a major source of N2O, a potent greenhouse gas with 300 times higher global warming potential than CO2. Several approaches have been proposed for mitigation of N2O emissions from WWTPs and have shown promising yet only site-specific results. Here, self-sustaining biotrickling filtration, an end-of-the-pipe treatment technology, was tested in situ at a full-scale WWTP under realistic operational conditions. Temporally varying untreated wastewater was used as trickling medium, and no temperature control was applied. The off-gas from the covered WWTP aerated section was conveyed through the pilot-scale reactor, and an average removal efficiency of 57.9 ± 29.1% was achieved during 165 days of operation despite the generally low and largely fluctuating influent N2O concentrations (ranging between 4.8 and 96.4 ppmv). For the following 60-day period, the continuously operated reactor system removed 43.0 ± 21.2% of the periodically augmented N2O, exhibiting elimination capacities as high as 5.25 g N2O m-3·h-1. Additionally, the bench-scale experiments performed abreast corroborated the resilience of the system to short-term N2O starvations. Our results corroborate the feasibility of biotrickling filtration for mitigating N2O emitted from WWTPs and demonstrate its robustness toward suboptimal field operating conditions and N2O starvation, as also supported by analyses of the microbial compositions and nosZ gene profiles.
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