New concept of contaminant removal from swine wastewater by a biological treatment process

Meixue CHEN,Rong QI,Wei AN,Heqing ZHANG,Yuansong WEI,Yiqi ZHOU,

PDF(277 KB)
PDF(277 KB)
Front. Biol. ›› 2009, Vol. 4 ›› Issue (4) : 402-413. DOI: 10.1007/s11515-009-0042-5
Research articles
Research articles

New concept of contaminant removal from swine wastewater by a biological treatment process

  • Meixue CHEN,Rong QI,Wei AN,Heqing ZHANG,Yuansong WEI,Yiqi ZHOU,
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Abstract

Pollution from concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) are the most serious pollution source in China now, and swine wastewater contains high concentrations of nutrients such as chemical oxygen demand (COD), biochemical oxygen demand 5 (BOD5), ammonium, and emergent contaminants related to public health. Biological processes are the most popular treatment methods for COD and ammonium removal. Considering the low operation cost, easy maintenance and high removal rate of contaminants in recent years, nitrogen removal via nitrite and real-time control processes using oxidation-reduction potential (ORP) and/or pH as parameters to control the aerobic and anaerobic cycles of a system has received much attention for animal wastewater treatment. During the biological treatment process, the emergent contaminants such as estrogen, antibiotics, and disinfection reagents have been the focus of research recently, and degradation bacteria and resistance bacteria have also been extracted from activated sludge. The microbial analysis technique is also advancement in the field of biodegradation bacteria and resistance bacteria. All of these advancements in research serve to improve wastewater treatment and decrease environmental hazards, especially for using manure as a fertilizer source for crop production.

Keywords

contaminants / swine wastewater / biological treatment

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Meixue CHEN, Rong QI, Wei AN, Heqing ZHANG, Yuansong WEI, Yiqi ZHOU,. New concept of contaminant removal from swine wastewater by a biological treatment process. Front. Biol., 2009, 4(4): 402‒413 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11515-009-0042-5
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