This book systematically investigates the nitrogen removal
characteristics of two screened aerobic denitrifying bacteria and their
applications in nitrogen oxides emissions reduction. It reveals that
Pseudomonas stutzeri PCN-1 possesses excellent capacity for aerobic
nitrogen removal, regardless of whether nitrate, nitrite or N2O were
taken as denitrification substrates. It also demonstrates that the rapid
N2O reduction is due to the coordinate expression of denitrification
genes. Further, the book discusses the bioaugmentation experiments
conducted in denitrifying SBR and a pilot-scale Carrousel oxidation
ditch, which confirmed that the strain could significantly enhance
denitrification performance, reduce N2O emission and improve system
stability. The second strain, P.aeruginosa PCN-2 accumulated
negligible NO during aerobic nitrate and nitrite removal and efficiently
removed NO from flue gas. This study is of great significance for
potential applications of aerobic denitrification in mitigating nitrogen
oxides emissions from biological nitrogen removal systems.