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IWA Publishing, Water Science and Technology, 6(48), p. 179-186

DOI: 10.2166/wst.2003.0391

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Operating feasibility of anaerobic whey treatment in a stirred sequencing batch reactor containing immobilized biomass

Journal article published in 2003 by S. M. Ratusznei, J. A. D. Rodrigues, M. Zaiat ORCID
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

The scope of this work was to evaluate the operating feasibility of anaerobic whey treatment in a stirred sequencing batch reactor (ASBR) containing biomass immobilized on inert support. Assays were performed using 8-hour cycles and agitation rate of 200 rpm at 30 ± 1¡C, for treating cheese whey containing 500 to 4,000 mgCOD/L, which corresponded to a volumetric organic load (VOL) of 0.81 to 5.7 gCOD/L.d. Stability and high organic matter removal of about 96% were achieved at effluent concentration below 160 mgCOD/L for non filtered samples. Operating stability of the reactor was shown to be strongly dependent on the alkalinity supplementing strategy during the assay, especially during the startup period, where NaHCO3 supplementation was approximately 20Ð30% of the chemical oxygen demand (mgNaHCO3/mgCOD). After startup, alkalinity supplementation could be reduced down to 10% maintaining efficiency and stability. Moreover, proper homogenization of the system through mechanical agitation was also shown to be indispensable, especially with increasing organic load.