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Partial nitrification in entrapped-cell-based reactors with two different cell-to-matrix ratios: performance, microenvironment, and microbial community

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posted on 2019-12-09, 11:33 authored by Pattaraporn Kunapongkiti, Tawan Limpiyakorn, Prinpida Sonthiphand, Chaiwat Rongsayamanont

In this study, we investigated the effect of different cell-to-matrix ratios (1% and 4%) on the partial nitrification of phosphorylated polyvinyl alcohol-entrapped-cell-based reactors and evaluated the microenvironment, microbial community, and microbial localization within the gel matrices. The results indicated that the reactor with a 1% cell-to-matrix ratio required 184 days of operation to reach partial nitrification that produced anaerobic ammonium oxidation-suitable effluent. In contrast, partial nitrification was achieved from the beginning of the operation of the reactor with the 4% cell-to-matrix ratio. The oxygen-limiting zone (dissolved oxygen = 0.5–1.5 mg L−1), where nitrite-oxidizing activity has been suggested to be suppressed and ammonia-oxidizing activity was reported to be maintained, occurred at 10–230 µm from the gel matrices surface. In addition, the layer of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria observed in this zone is likely to have played a role in obstructing oxygen penetration into the inner region of the gel matrices. The next-generation sequencing results indicated that members of the family Nitrosomonadaceae accounted for 16.4–20.7% of the relative abundance of bacteria at the family level, while members of the family Bradyrhizobiaceae, to which the genus Nitrobacter belongs, accounted for approximately 10% of the relative abundance of bacteria at the genus level in the gel matrices.

Funding

This study was supported by the Thailand Research Fund (TRF) research scholar MRG5980226. In addition, the authors thank the Office of Higher Education Commission (OHEC) and the S&T Postgraduate Education and Research Development Office (PERDO) for financial support of the Research Program. This study was partially supported by the National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC), NSTDA, Ministry of Science and Technology, Thailand, through the program Research Network NANOTEC (RNN).

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