Anaerobic digestion of high-sulphate-content wastewater from the industrial production of citric acid

Abstract
The start-up and steady-state operation of a full-scale fixed bed digester treating citric acid production wastewater with an estimated COD/sulphate ratio of approximately 4 are described. Parallel studies at laboratory-scale with two reactors, one of which received the same high influent sulphate concentration as the full-scale plant, confirmed the finding that methanogenesis was not inhibited by the level of sulphate reduction shown to occur. After long-term operation on a high sulphate influent, the retained biomass in the laboratory and full-scale reactors displayed a very low specific methanogenic activity against propionate and butyrate. Since propionate and butyrate were barely detectable in the effluents at steady-state, their oxidation under high influent sulphate conditions may be completely or incompletely mediated by fatty-acid-utilising SRB.