Every week or so, somebody posts here how their nitrogen cycle is stuck on "spin-dry" or something-- and I mumble something about nitrifiers being tender yada yada yada...
So here's grist for our mill:
G.A. Vazquez-Rodriguez and J.-L. Rols worked up a "Study of the nitrification process with activated sludge: inhibiting effect of ammonia on nitrifying bacteria" in Rev. Sci. Eau vol. 10 (3) : 359-375. ((1997) There's an English abstract .
The authors of the paper measured the respiration of nitrifying bacterial communities to assess the inhibition that ammonia exerted. The influences of pH, temperature, and the free ammonia concentration (NH3-N) were studied. The maximum activity of the nitrifying bacteria was found at pH 7.8 and at 29oC (ca84oF), with the 90% range of maximum activity lying between pH values of 7.5 and 8.1. For a concentration of 11.4 mg NH3-N, (pretty stiff) a nitrification inhibition degree of 60% was reached.
It's always handy to have some figures...
So here's grist for our mill:
G.A. Vazquez-Rodriguez and J.-L. Rols worked up a "Study of the nitrification process with activated sludge: inhibiting effect of ammonia on nitrifying bacteria" in Rev. Sci. Eau vol. 10 (3) : 359-375. ((1997) There's an English abstract .
The authors of the paper measured the respiration of nitrifying bacterial communities to assess the inhibition that ammonia exerted. The influences of pH, temperature, and the free ammonia concentration (NH3-N) were studied. The maximum activity of the nitrifying bacteria was found at pH 7.8 and at 29oC (ca84oF), with the 90% range of maximum activity lying between pH values of 7.5 and 8.1. For a concentration of 11.4 mg NH3-N, (pretty stiff) a nitrification inhibition degree of 60% was reached.
It's always handy to have some figures...