Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell

Developing cost-effective technology for treatment of sewage and nitrogen-containing groundwater is one of the crucial challenges of global water industries. Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) oxidize organics from sewage by exoelectrogens on anode to produce electricity while denitrifiers on cathode utili...

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Published in:Environmental Research
Main Author: Al-Mamun A.; Jafary T.; Baawain M.S.; Rahman S.; Choudhury M.R.; Tabatabaei M.; Lam S.S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academic Press Inc. 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85079668657&doi=10.1016%2fj.envres.2020.109273&partnerID=40&md5=c0af77cc6a6c7862600326526623b001
id 2-s2.0-85079668657
spelling 2-s2.0-85079668657
Al-Mamun A.; Jafary T.; Baawain M.S.; Rahman S.; Choudhury M.R.; Tabatabaei M.; Lam S.S.
Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
2020
Environmental Research
183

10.1016/j.envres.2020.109273
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85079668657&doi=10.1016%2fj.envres.2020.109273&partnerID=40&md5=c0af77cc6a6c7862600326526623b001
Developing cost-effective technology for treatment of sewage and nitrogen-containing groundwater is one of the crucial challenges of global water industries. Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) oxidize organics from sewage by exoelectrogens on anode to produce electricity while denitrifiers on cathode utilize the generated electricity to reduce nitrogen from contaminated groundwater. As the exoelectrogens are incapable of oxidizing insoluble, polymeric, and complex organics, a novel integration of an anaerobic sequencing batch reactor (ASBR) prior to the MFC simultaneously achieve hydrolytic-acidogenic conversion of complex organics, boost power recovery, and remove Carbon/Nitrogen (C/N) from the sewage and groundwater. The results obtained revealed increases in the fractions of soluble organics and volatile fatty acids in pretreated sewage by 52 ± 19% and 120 ± 40%, respectively. The optimum power and current generation with the pretreated sewage were 7.1 W m−3 and 45.88 A m−3, respectively, corresponding to 8% and 10% improvements compared to untreated sewage. Moreover, the integration of the ASBR with the biocathode MFC led to 217% higher carbon and 136% higher nitrogen removal efficiencies compared to the similar system without ASBR. The outcomes of the present study represent the promising prospects of using ASBR pretreatment and successive utilization of solubilized organics in denitrifying biocathode MFCs for simultaneous energy recovery and C/N removal from both sewage and nitrate nitrogen-contaminated groundwater. © 2020 Elsevier Inc.
Academic Press Inc.
139351
English
Article

author Al-Mamun A.; Jafary T.; Baawain M.S.; Rahman S.; Choudhury M.R.; Tabatabaei M.; Lam S.S.
spellingShingle Al-Mamun A.; Jafary T.; Baawain M.S.; Rahman S.; Choudhury M.R.; Tabatabaei M.; Lam S.S.
Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
author_facet Al-Mamun A.; Jafary T.; Baawain M.S.; Rahman S.; Choudhury M.R.; Tabatabaei M.; Lam S.S.
author_sort Al-Mamun A.; Jafary T.; Baawain M.S.; Rahman S.; Choudhury M.R.; Tabatabaei M.; Lam S.S.
title Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
title_short Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
title_full Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
title_fullStr Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
title_full_unstemmed Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
title_sort Energy recovery and carbon/nitrogen removal from sewage and contaminated groundwater in a coupled hydrolytic-acidogenic sequencing batch reactor and denitrifying biocathode microbial fuel cell
publishDate 2020
container_title Environmental Research
container_volume 183
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.envres.2020.109273
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85079668657&doi=10.1016%2fj.envres.2020.109273&partnerID=40&md5=c0af77cc6a6c7862600326526623b001
description Developing cost-effective technology for treatment of sewage and nitrogen-containing groundwater is one of the crucial challenges of global water industries. Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) oxidize organics from sewage by exoelectrogens on anode to produce electricity while denitrifiers on cathode utilize the generated electricity to reduce nitrogen from contaminated groundwater. As the exoelectrogens are incapable of oxidizing insoluble, polymeric, and complex organics, a novel integration of an anaerobic sequencing batch reactor (ASBR) prior to the MFC simultaneously achieve hydrolytic-acidogenic conversion of complex organics, boost power recovery, and remove Carbon/Nitrogen (C/N) from the sewage and groundwater. The results obtained revealed increases in the fractions of soluble organics and volatile fatty acids in pretreated sewage by 52 ± 19% and 120 ± 40%, respectively. The optimum power and current generation with the pretreated sewage were 7.1 W m−3 and 45.88 A m−3, respectively, corresponding to 8% and 10% improvements compared to untreated sewage. Moreover, the integration of the ASBR with the biocathode MFC led to 217% higher carbon and 136% higher nitrogen removal efficiencies compared to the similar system without ASBR. The outcomes of the present study represent the promising prospects of using ASBR pretreatment and successive utilization of solubilized organics in denitrifying biocathode MFCs for simultaneous energy recovery and C/N removal from both sewage and nitrate nitrogen-contaminated groundwater. © 2020 Elsevier Inc.
publisher Academic Press Inc.
issn 139351
language English
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