Microbiological technologies for treatment of cyanide.
2006
Microbiological systems for the treatment of wastewaters were developed around the late 1890s,
initially for treatment of human waste and later for treatment of industrial wastes. The first treatment
systems were run in “batch mode”; wastewater was held in reactors containing rocks. Although the
microbial nature of the process was not clearly understood initially, it is now known that microbes
grow in biofilms attach to the rocks, utilize carbon and nitrogen compounds in the waste as a food
source, and thus reduce the oxygen demand the wastewaters would exert when released to the
environment. To increase the amount of wastewater that could be treated and decrease problems
associated with clogging, two continuous processes were developed in the early 1900s — trickling
filters [1] and activated sludge [2]. These processes continue to dominate wastewater treatment
systems to the modern day.
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