A New Strategy for Recovering Organic Substance from Industrial Wastewater Using Combined Chemical Enhanced Primary Treatment (CEPT) and Nitrification Filter
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This study developed an integrated Chemical Enhanced Primary Treatment (CEPT) and nitrification filter (NF) system to optimize organic matter recovery from industrial wastewater toward carbon neutrality. Jar-test experiments determined optimal coagula-tion conditions using FeCl₃ (0.5 mM) and anionic polymer (0.5 mg/L), achieving removal efficiencies of 64% TCOD, 88% TP, and 79% TSS. The bench-scale CEPT-NF system oper-ated at varying hydraulic retention times (2–6 hours) and internal recycle ratios (50–100%). Optimal performance occurred at 100% recycle ratio and 4-hour HRT, achieving 80% TCOD removal compared to 62% without recycling. The nitrification filter achieved 95% NH₄+-N oxidation at 30°C with 5–6 hour HRT. The higher TCOD removal (80%) could be achieved in the CEPT-NF not only by continuous chemical coagulation but also by hetero-trophic assimilation of denitrification. Mass balance analysis showed significant green-house gas reduction potential, with CO₂ emissions decreasing from 1,482 to 225 tCO₂/year—a 6.6-fold reduction compared to conventional treatment. The CEPT-NF pro-cess enhanced organic matter recovery through chemical coagulation and biological deni-trification, addressing poor SCOD removal limitations of conventional primary precipita-tion.