Partial nitritation in sponge-bed trickling filters (STF) under natural air circulation was studied in two
reactors: STF-1 and STF-2 operated at 30 C with sponge thickness of 0.75 and 1.50 cm, respectively.
The coexistence of nitrifiers and Anammox bacteria was obtained and attributed to the favorable environment
created by the reactors’ design and operational regimes. After 114 days of operation, the STF-1 had
an average NH4
+
-N removal of 69.3% (1.17 kg N/m3
sponge d) and a total nitrogen removal of 52.2% (0.88 kg
N/m3
sponge d) at a Nitrogen Loading Rate (NLR) of 1.68 kg N/m3
sponge d and Hydraulic Retention Time (HRT)
of 1.71 h. The STF-2 showed an average NH4
+
-N removal of 81.6 % (0.77 kg N/m3
sponge d) and a total nitrogen
removal of 54% (0.51 kg N/m3
sponge d), at an NLR of 0.95 kg N/m3
sponge d and HRT of 2.96 h. The findings suggest
that autotrophic nitrogen removal over nitrite in STF systems is a feasible alternative.