A new interpretation of endogenous respiration profiles for the evaluation of the endogenous decay rate of heterotrophic biomass in activated sludge

2013 
In current activated sludge models aerobic degradation, resulting in loss of activity and mass of activated sludge is expressed with only one process called decay. The kinetics of this process is regarded to be first order and constant with respect to the loading conditions. In this work twelve aerobic digestion batch experiments were conducted for the activated sludge of seven different water resource recovery facilities (WRRFs). An analysis of the obtained respirograms shows three clearly distinguishable phases. The first phase is assumed to be due to the degradation of stored material (XSTOR) and active biomass simultaneously. The second phase is exclusively due to the degradation of active biomass that is regarded to consist mainly of ordinary heterotrophic biomass (XOHO). The first order decay rate is slower than the degradation rate in phase 1 and varies between samples. The decay rate correlates with the activity of the activated sludge expressed as the ratio of initial heterotrophic OUR and the initial organic fraction XORG of the activated sludge. This second phase was detectable until day 5 of most of the experiments. After that time within phase 3 the OUR decrease slows down and the OUR even increased for short intervals. This behaviour is thought to be due to the activity of higher organisms and the adaptation of microorganisms to starvation.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    19
    References
    39
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []