Specific affinity and relative abundance of methanogens in acclimated anaerobic sludge treating low-strength wastewater.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalApplied microbiology and biotechnology
Year 2020
Kinetic parameters affecting effluent water quality including half saturation constant (Ks), maximum specific growth rate (μmax), and specific affinity ([Formula: see text], defined as μmax/Ks) were investigated using three types of anaerobic sludge (raw anaerobic digestion sludge referred to as unacclimated sludge, unacclimated sludge after endogenous decay, and sludge acclimated to low-strength wastewater in an anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR) for 360 days). Long-term acclimation to low-strength wastewater resulted in sludge with high specific affinity (1.6 × 10-3 L/mg COD/day for acclimated sludge compared to 4.1 × 10-4 L/mg COD/day for unacclimated sludge). The μmax values for unacclimated sludge and acclimated sludge were 0.08 and 0.07 day-1, respectively. The Ks values for unacclimated sludge and acclimated sludge were 194 ± 81 mg COD/L and 45 ± 13 mg COD/L, respectively. Although the Ks of unacclimated sludge after endogenous decay increased to 772 ± 74 mg COD/L, μmax increased to 0.35 day-1 as well, resulting in no statistically significant difference of [Formula: see text] between the two types of unacclimated sludge. Overall, [Formula: see text] is a better indicator than μmax or Ks alone for determining effluent water quality, as effluent substrate concentration is approximately inversely proportional to the specific affinity. 16S rRNA sequencing data analysis indicated a high abundance (85.8% of total archaea) of Methanosaeta in the microbial community after long-term acclimation. High [Formula: see text] associated with the enrichment of Methanosaeta appears to ensure successful anaerobic treatment of low-strength wastewater.
Epistemonikos ID: 24d10ff30851bfb91d997c87e8083a8020511adc
First added on: Apr 13, 2022