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Title: Emission and control of nitrous oxide from a biological wastewater treatment system with intermittent aeration. Author: Park KY, Inamori Y, Mizuochi M, Ahn KH. Journal: J Biosci Bioeng; 2000; 90(3):247-52. PubMed ID: 16232852. Abstract: Nitrous oxide (N2O) can be emitted as a by-product of the process of nitrogen removal from wastewater. Two methods of complete denitrification and media application were studied in lab-scale intermittent aeration reactors fed with domestic wastewater to refine methods of controlling the N2O emission rate. A study on cyclic patterns showed that the highest N2O emission rate was at the beginning of the aerobic phase rather than the anoxic phase. This was probably because the nitrifying bacteria had accumulated nitrite nitrogen (NO2-) under low DO conditions. Methanol as an external carbon source was added during the anoxic phase to reduce nitrate nitrogen (NO3-) when denitrification was completed. The N2O emission rates in both the aerobic and anoxic phases were significantly influenced by residual NO3-, increasing monotonically as the concentration of NO3- in the reactor increased. Over 95% of average N2O emissions in both the aerobic and anoxic phases were prevented when methanol was added. The biofilm reactor showed similar patterns to those of the non-biofilm reactor in track behavior, but the former was more effective in the reduction of N2O emissions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]