Evaluation of batch and fed-batch rotating drum biological contactor using immobilized Trametes hirsuta EDN082 for non-sterile real textile wastewater treatment
Journal article, 2024

White rot fungi, in both free and immobilized forms, excel in degrading dyes through adsorption and enzyme degradation. However, existing studies often focus on synthetic wastewater within sterile lab conditions. This study extends the application of Trametes hirsuta EDN082 immobilized in light-expanded clay aggregates (myco-LECAs) packed in a rotating drum biological contactor (RDBC) for treating real textile wastewater under non-sterile conditions to simulate industrial treatment scenarios. Experiments included batch and fed-batch RDBC to assess the impact of additional glucose and stepwise dilution on quality indicators like pH, chemical oxygen demand (COD), ammonia nitrogen (NH4+-N), color, and solids. In fed-batch RDBC with 0.5 % additional glucose, myco-LECAs achieved a maximum of 94 % COD removal (day 15), 99 % NH4+-N reduction (day 33), and 39 % decolorization without additional glucose. In comparison, myco-LECAs in batch RDBC highlighted 89 % NH4+-N reduction in 9 days without pH adjustment or additional nutrients. The pH maintained between 6−9, with no toxicity in Artemia salina, and 97−100 % removal of E. coli. Compared to Indonesian textile wastewater discharge limits, the technology achieved effective ammonia removal below 8 mg/L. This suggests that immobilized T. hirsuta EDN082 in LECAs presents a viable, non-sterile treatment for real textile wastewater.

Rotating drum biological contactor

Real textile wastewater

Immobilization

White rot fungi

Non-sterile wastewater treatment

Author

Fenny Clara Ardiati

National Research & Innovation Agency (BRIN)

Sita Heris Anita

National Research & Innovation Agency (BRIN)

Oktan Dwi Nurhayat

National Research & Innovation Agency (BRIN)

Rayi Mishelia Chempaka

Universitas Indonesia

Dede Heri Yuli Yanto

National Research & Innovation Agency (BRIN)

Takashi Watanabe

Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere

Britt-Marie Wilen

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Water Environment Technology

Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering

2213-2929 (ISSN) 2213-3437 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 4 113241

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Water Treatment

Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.jece.2024.113241

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6/1/2026 1