The inevitable discharge of zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO NPs), from consumer and industrial products, into wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) has created a need to determine their effect on sludge digestion.… Click to show full abstract
The inevitable discharge of zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO NPs), from consumer and industrial products, into wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) has created a need to determine their effect on sludge digestion. In this study, the effect of particle size (30 nm and 100 nm), type (coated and non-coated), and dose (6, 75, and 150 mg/g feed total solids (TS)) of ZnO NPs on anaerobic sludge digestion was studied under mesophilic (35 °C) and thermophilic (55 °C) conditions. The effect was investigated in two stages with different digester feeding regime: (1) batch biochemical methane potential (BMP) assays, and (2) semi-continuously fed reactors. Results showed that ZnO NPs were inhibitory at medium and high levels (75 and 100 mg ZnO/g TS, respectively). Coated NPs created less inhibition than non-coated NPs. Thermophilic bacteria were more sensitive to ZnO NPs compared with mesophilic bacteria. For the non-coated ZnO NPs, only the mesophilic batch assays were able to recover at the medium concentration and the thermophilic reactors presented chronic inhibition and could not recover. As a beneficial outcome, coated ZnO NPs significantly reduced odor-causing volatile sulfur compounds in digester headspace in comparison with the non-coated NPs. In summary, the condition in which ZnO NPs would have little to no effect would be 6 mg/g TS-coated ZnO NPs under mesophilic conditions.
               
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