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Fate of pathogen indicators in a domestic blend of food waste and wastewater through a two-stage anaerobic digestion system

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Rounsefell, B. D., O'Sullivan, C. A., Chinivasagam, H.N., Batstone, D. and Clarke, W. P. (2012) Fate of pathogen indicators in a domestic blend of food waste and wastewater through a two-stage anaerobic digestion system. Water Science & Technology, 67 (2). p. 366. ISSN 0273-1223

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Article Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2012.573

Abstract

Anaerobic digestion is a viable on-site treatment technology for rich organic waste streams such as food waste and blackwater. In contrast to large-scale municipal wastewater treatment plants which are typically located away from the community, the effluent from any type of on-site system is a potential pathogenic hazard because of the intimacy of the system to the community. The native concentrations of the pathogen indicators Escherichia coli, Clostridium perfringens and somatic coliphage were tracked for 30 days under stable operation (organic loading rate (OLR) = 1.8 kgCOD m(-3) day(-1), methane yield = 52% on a chemical oxygen demand (COD) basis) of a two-stage laboratory-scale digester treating a mixture of food waste and blackwater. E. coli numbers were reduced by a factor of 10(6.4) in the thermophilic stage, from 10(7.5+/-0.3) to 10(1.1+/-0.1) cfu 100 mL(-1), but regenerated by a factor of 10(4) in the mesophilic stage. Neither the thermophilic nor mesophilic stages had any significant impact on C. perfringens concentrations. Coliphage concentrations were reduced by a factor of 10(1.4) across the two stages. The study shows that anaerobic digestion only reduces pathogen counts marginally but that counts in effluent samples could be readily reduced to below detection limits by filtration through a 0.22 microm membrane, to investigate membrane filtration as a possible sanitation technique.

Item Type:Article
Business groups:Animal Science
Subjects:Science > Microbiology > Bacteria
Agriculture > Agriculture (General) > Agricultural chemistry. Agricultural chemicals
Live Archive:06 Oct 2015 00:18
Last Modified:10 Oct 2024 00:00

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