The Potentials of an Integrated Ultrasonic Membrane Anaerobic System (IUMAS) in Treating Sugar Cane Wastewater

https://doi.org/10.22146/ijc.40866

Abdurahman Hamid Nour(1*), Yasmeen Hafiz Zaki(2), Hybat Salih Mohamed(3), Hesham Hussein Rassem(4)

(1) Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering, Universiti Malaysia Pahang, Tun Razak Highway 26300 Gambang, Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia
(2) Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering, Universiti Malaysia Pahang, Tun Razak Highway 26300 Gambang, Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia
(3) Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering, Universiti Malaysia Pahang, Tun Razak Highway 26300 Gambang, Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia
(4) Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering, Universiti Malaysia Pahang, Tun Razak Highway 26300 Gambang, Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia
(*) Corresponding Author

Abstract


Excess levels of organic and inorganic matters in the discharge from sugarcane mill effluent (SCME) wastewater, causes the earnest environmental issue. In this study, a single unit integrated ultrasonic membrane anaerobic system (IUMAS) has been investigated for industrial sugarcane wastewater treatment. As the “Membrane-fouling” is one of the main constraints of IUMAS which eventually reduce the processing ability. In the present study, most researchers resort to cost reduction. IUMAS was alternatively applied as an economical approach for SCME wastewater treatment. The application of “Multiple-analysis” methods (COD, BOD, TSS) and three kinetic models during the treatment, suggested the specific range of organic loading rate to produce biogas. The result showed the increased methane gas production up to 80% in the biogas, with 94 -96% of COD removal efficiency from the SCME wastewater. Results concluded the effective efficiency of IUMAS to reduce the membrane fouling and treatment of SCME wastewater as well as enhanced production of methane gas.

Keywords


chemical oxygen demand; integrated ultrasonic membrane anaerobic system; kinetics

Full Text:

Full Text PDF


References

[1] Angelakis, A.N., and Snyder, S.A., 2015, Wastewater treatment and reuse: Past, present, and future, Water, 7 (9), 4887–4895.

[2] Finkelman, R.B., Orem, W.H., Plumlee, G.S., and Selinus, O., 2018, “Applications of Geochemistry to Medical Geology” in Environmental Geochemistry: Site Characterization, Data Analysis and Case Histories, 2nd ed., Eds., De Vivo, B., Belkin, H.E., and Lima, A., Elsevier B.V., 435–465.

[3] Atalay, S., and Ersöz, G., 2016, Novel Catalysts in Advanced Oxidation of Organic Pollutants, Springer International Publishing.

[4] Aygun, A., Nas, B., and Berktay, A., 2008, Influence of high organic loading rates on COD removal and sludge production in moving bed biofilm reactor, Environ. Eng. Sci., 25 (9), 1311–1316.

[5] Zhou, S., Patty, A., and Chen, S., 2017, Advances in Energy Science and Equipment Engineering II, Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Energy Equipment Science and Engineering (ICEESE 2016), November 12-14, 2016, Guangzhou, China.

[6] Ozturk, M., Saba, N., Altay, V., Iqbal, R., Hakeem, K.R., Jawaid, M., and Ibrahim, F.H., 2017, Biomass and bioenergy: An overview of the development potential in Turkey and Malaysia, Renewable Sustainable Energy Rev., 79, 1285–1302.

[7] Umo, A.M., and Alabi, S.B., 2016, Advances in super-saturation measurement and estimation methods for sugar crystallisation process, Int. J. Food Eng., 2 (2), 108–112.

[8] Wang, S., Lu, G.Q., and Millar, G.J., 1996, Carbon dioxide reforming of methane to produce synthesis gas over metal-supported catalysts: State of the art, Energy Fuels, 10 (4) 896–904.

[9] Chen, T.T., Zheng, P., and Shen, L.D., 2013, Growth and metabolism characteristics of anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria aggregates, Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 97 (12), 5575–5583.

[10] Ullah, K., Ahmad, M., Sofia, Sharma, V.K., Lu, P., Harvey, A., Zafar, M., and Sultana, S., 2015, Assessing the potential of algal biomass opportunities for bioenergy industry: A review, Fuel, 143, 414–423.

[11] Stafford, W.H., Von Maltitz, G.P., and Watson, H.K., 2018, Reducing the costs of landscape restoration by using invasive alien plant biomass for bioenergy, Wiley Interdiscip. Rev.: Energy Environ., 7 (1), 272.

[12] Cheremisinoff, N.P., 1997, Biotechnology for Waste and Wastewater Treatment, William Andrew Publishing, Norwich, United States.

[13] Kolarik L.O., and Priestley A.J., 1996, Modern Techniques in Water and Wastewater Treatment, CSIRO Publishing.

[14] Subramanian, B., and Pagilla, K.R., 2014, Anaerobic digester foaming in full-scale cylindrical digesters–Effects of organic loading rate, feed characteristics, and mixing, Bioresour. Technol., 159, 182–192.

[15] Abdurahman, N.H., and Azhari, N.H., 2013, Performance of ultrasonic membrane anaerobic system (UMAS) in membrane fouling control, IJESIT, 2 (6), 480–491.

[16] Martinez-Jimenez, F.D., Pinto, M.P.M., Mudhoo, A., Neves, T.A., Rostagno, M.A., and Forster-Carneiro, T., 2017, Influence of ultrasound irradiation pre-treatment in biohythane generation from the thermophilic anaerobic co-digestion of sugar production residues, J. Environ. Chem. Eng., 5 (4), 3749–3758.

[17] Poh, P.E., Tan, D.T., Chan, E. S., and Tey, B.T., 2015, “Current Advances of Biogas Production via Anaerobic Digestion of Industrial Wastewater” in Advances in Bioprocess Technology, Eds., Ranvindra, P., Springer International Publishing, 149–163.

[18] de Lemos Chernicharo, C.A., 2017, Anaerobic Reactors, IWA Publishing, London, UK.

[19] APHA, 2005, Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, 21st ed., American Public Health Association, Washington, DC, USA.

[20] Poddar, P.K., and Sahu, O., 2017, Quality and management of wastewater in sugar industry, Appl. Water Sci., 7 (1), 461–468.

[21] Borja-Padilla, R., and Banks, C.J., 1993, Thermophilic semi-continuous anaerobic treatment of palm oil mill effluent, Biotechnol. Lett., 15 (7), 761–766.

[22] Wu, T.Y., Mohammad, A.W., Jahim, J.M., and Anuar, N., 2010, Pollution control technologies for the treatment of palm oil mill effluent (POME) through end-of-pipe processes, Environ. Manage., 91 (7), 1467–1490.

[23] Fakhru’l-Razi A., 1994, Ultrafiltration membrane separation for anaerobic wastewater treatment, Water Sci. Technol., 30 (12), 321–327.

[24] Abdurahman, N.H., Rosli, Y.M., and Azhari, N.H., 2011, Development of a membrane anaerobic system (MAS) for palm oil mill effluent (POME) treatment, Desalination, 266 (1-3), 208–212.

[25] Abdullah, A.G.L., Idris, A., Ahmadun, F.R., Baharin, B.S., Emby, F., Noor, M.J.M.M., and Nour, A.H. 2005, A kinetic study of a membrane anaerobic reactor (MAR) for treatment of sewage sludge, Desalination, 183 (1-3), 439–445.

[26] Monod, J., 1949, The growth of bacterial cultures, Annu. Rev. Microbiol., 3, 371-394.

[27] Contois, D.E., 1959, Kinetics of bacterial growth: Relationship between population density and space growth rate of continuous cultures, J. Gen. Microbiol., 21 (1), 40–50.

[28] Chen, Y.R., and Hashimoto, A.G., 1980, Substrate utilization kinetic model for biological treatment processes, Biotechnol. Bioeng., 22 (10), 2081–2095.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/ijc.40866

Article Metrics

Abstract views : 2564 | views : 2420


Copyright (c) 2019 Indonesian Journal of Chemistry

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

 


Indonesian Journal of Chemistry (ISSN 1411-9420 /e-ISSN 2460-1578) - Chemistry Department, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia.

Web
Analytics View The Statistics of Indones. J. Chem.