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Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge

Fouling is considered one of the main drawbacks of membrane bioreactor (MBR) technology. Among the main fouling agents, extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) are considered one of the most impactful since they cause the decrease of sludge filterability and decline of membrane flux in the long ter...

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Autores principales: Corsino, Santo Fabio, Di Bella, Gaetano, Traina, Francesco, Montes, Lucia Argiz, Val del Rio, Angeles, Corral, Anuska Mosquera, Torregrossa, Michele, Viviani, Gaspare
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9317799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35877906
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes12070703
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author Corsino, Santo Fabio
Di Bella, Gaetano
Traina, Francesco
Montes, Lucia Argiz
Val del Rio, Angeles
Corral, Anuska Mosquera
Torregrossa, Michele
Viviani, Gaspare
author_facet Corsino, Santo Fabio
Di Bella, Gaetano
Traina, Francesco
Montes, Lucia Argiz
Val del Rio, Angeles
Corral, Anuska Mosquera
Torregrossa, Michele
Viviani, Gaspare
author_sort Corsino, Santo Fabio
collection PubMed
description Fouling is considered one of the main drawbacks of membrane bioreactor (MBR) technology. Among the main fouling agents, extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) are considered one of the most impactful since they cause the decrease of sludge filterability and decline of membrane flux in the long term. The present study investigated a biological strategy to reduce the membrane-fouling tendency in MBR systems. This consisted of seeding the reactor with activated sludge enriched in microorganisms with polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) storage ability and by imposing proper operating conditions to drive the carbon toward intracellular (PHA) rather than extracellular (EPS) accumulation. For that purpose, an MBR lab-scale plant was operated for 175 days, divided into four periods (1–4) according to different food to microorganisms’ ratios (F/M) (0.80 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 1), 0.13 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 2), 0.28 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 3), and 0.38 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 4)). The application of the feast/famine strategy favored the accumulation of intracellular polymers by bacteria. The increase of the PHA accumulation inside the cells corresponded to the decrease of EPS and an F/M of 0.40–0.50 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) was found as optimum to maximize the PHA production, while minimizing EPS. The lowest EPS content in the sludge (18% of total suspended solids) that corresponded to the maximum content of PHA (9.3%) was found in Period 4 and determined significant mitigation of the fouling rate, whose value was close to 0.10 × 10(11) m(−1) h(−1). Thus, by imposing proper operating conditions, it was possible to drive the organic matter toward PHA accumulation. Moreover, a lower EPS content corresponded to a decrease in the irreversible fouling mechanism, which would imply a lower frequency of the extraordinary cleaning operations. This study highlighted the possibility of obtaining a double benefit by applying an MBR system in the frame of wastewater valorization: minimizing the fouling tendency of the membrane and recovery precursors of bioplastics from wastewater in line with the circular economy model.
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spelling pubmed-93177992022-07-27 Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge Corsino, Santo Fabio Di Bella, Gaetano Traina, Francesco Montes, Lucia Argiz Val del Rio, Angeles Corral, Anuska Mosquera Torregrossa, Michele Viviani, Gaspare Membranes (Basel) Article Fouling is considered one of the main drawbacks of membrane bioreactor (MBR) technology. Among the main fouling agents, extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) are considered one of the most impactful since they cause the decrease of sludge filterability and decline of membrane flux in the long term. The present study investigated a biological strategy to reduce the membrane-fouling tendency in MBR systems. This consisted of seeding the reactor with activated sludge enriched in microorganisms with polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) storage ability and by imposing proper operating conditions to drive the carbon toward intracellular (PHA) rather than extracellular (EPS) accumulation. For that purpose, an MBR lab-scale plant was operated for 175 days, divided into four periods (1–4) according to different food to microorganisms’ ratios (F/M) (0.80 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 1), 0.13 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 2), 0.28 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 3), and 0.38 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) (Period 4)). The application of the feast/famine strategy favored the accumulation of intracellular polymers by bacteria. The increase of the PHA accumulation inside the cells corresponded to the decrease of EPS and an F/M of 0.40–0.50 kg COD kg TSS(−1) d(−1) was found as optimum to maximize the PHA production, while minimizing EPS. The lowest EPS content in the sludge (18% of total suspended solids) that corresponded to the maximum content of PHA (9.3%) was found in Period 4 and determined significant mitigation of the fouling rate, whose value was close to 0.10 × 10(11) m(−1) h(−1). Thus, by imposing proper operating conditions, it was possible to drive the organic matter toward PHA accumulation. Moreover, a lower EPS content corresponded to a decrease in the irreversible fouling mechanism, which would imply a lower frequency of the extraordinary cleaning operations. This study highlighted the possibility of obtaining a double benefit by applying an MBR system in the frame of wastewater valorization: minimizing the fouling tendency of the membrane and recovery precursors of bioplastics from wastewater in line with the circular economy model. MDPI 2022-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9317799/ /pubmed/35877906 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes12070703 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Corsino, Santo Fabio
Di Bella, Gaetano
Traina, Francesco
Montes, Lucia Argiz
Val del Rio, Angeles
Corral, Anuska Mosquera
Torregrossa, Michele
Viviani, Gaspare
Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge
title Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge
title_full Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge
title_fullStr Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge
title_full_unstemmed Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge
title_short Membrane Fouling Mitigation in MBR via the Feast–Famine Strategy to Enhance PHA Production by Activated Sludge
title_sort membrane fouling mitigation in mbr via the feast–famine strategy to enhance pha production by activated sludge
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9317799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35877906
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes12070703
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