Organic matter removal from saline agricultural drainage wastewater using a moving bed biofilm reactor
We investigated the effect of salinity on the removal of organics and ammonium from agricultural drainage wastewater (ADW) using moving bed biofilm reactors (MBBRs). Under the typical salinity level of ADW (total dissolved solids (TDS) concentration up to 2.5 g·L−1), microorganisms were acclimated for 40 days on plastic carriers and a stable slime layer of attached biofilm was formed. Next, six batch mode MBBRs were set up and run under different salinity conditions (0.2–20 g-TDS·L−1). The removal efficiency of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and ammonium–nitrogen (NH4-N) in 6 hours decreased from 98 and 68% to 64 and 21% with increasing salt concentrations from 2.5 to 20 g-TDS·L−1, respectively. In addition, at decreasing salt levels of 0.2 g-TDS·L−1, both COD removal and nitrification were slightly lowered. Kinetic analysis indicated that the first-order reaction rate constant (
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