What are biocultures for wastewater Treatment: A complete EHS guide

This is a detailed article on biocultures for wastewater treatment, covering their importance, working mechanism, applications, and industrial benefits. It explains how microbial consortia improve ETP and STP efficiency, enhance biological degradation of pollutants, and ensure compliance with CPCB and NGT wastewater discharge standards. Contact us if you need industry specific consultation on biocultures utility.

Table of Contents

  1. What are Biocultures for Wastewater Treatment?
  2. Why Do We Need Biocultures?
  3. How Do Biocultures Work?
  4. Types of Biocultures and Formulation
  5. How Biocultures Are Manufactured (End-to-End)
  6. Sector-Wise Applications of Biocultures in Wastewater Treatment
  7. Supporting Conditions for Bioculture Effectiveness
  8. Environmental, Safety & Compliance Considerations
  9. FAQs
  10. Conclusion

Introduction

The current growth of India is exponential in each sector, whether it is defence, semiconductors, industries, or exports, among others. But, there is one more thing where India has an exponential graph, which is pollution, and to be specific, water pollution. Untreated Industrial and sewage wastewater is still one of the biggest menaces that the country is facing, and despite a central body such as the NGT and CPCB in function issuing strict compliance, along with practically every industry having a wastewater treatment plant.

Now the question arises if every industry has a facility to treat wastewater or there are existing STPs to treat sewage, and new ones are being built, then why does this menace of water pollution still exist to such a large scale?

Well, the answer is simple. No hardware can work without proper software. Meaning the infrastructure of an ETP/STP is not enough to treat wastewater. As the maximum work of pollution reduction is done by biological treatment, which uses the same mechanism of nature through which a pile of garbage gets degraded automatically, a dead body is reduced to bones within days, how milk gets transformed into hung curd, or how our food gets digested easily. And the warriors of this mechanism are microbes.

Water pollution is one of the most critical environmental challenges faced by industries today. Despite the presence of advanced Effluent Treatment Plants (ETPs) and Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs), untreated effluents still contribute to high BOD, COD, and TDS levels in water bodies. This is where biocultures for wastewater treatment play a pivotal role.

Biocultures—specialized microbial consortia—are introduced into biological treatment systems to accelerate the biodegradation of organic pollutants, improve sludge reduction, and enhance nitrogen and phosphorus removal. From industrial wastewater management to municipal sewage treatment, biocultures ensure faster recovery from toxic shock loads, stabilize the microbial population, and improve compliance with environmental norms in India.

Now these microbes, when used effectively with proper research and execution, can enhance the pollution-degrading capacity of the wastewater treatment plant 3 times.

What are biocultures for Wastewater Treatment?

Biocultures are combinations of microorganisms that play a crucial role in the biological treatment of wastewater. These microbial consortia work to degrade complex pollutants such as hydrocarbons, phenols, fats, oils, and grease (FOG), ensuring COD and BOD reduction. They are widely used in:

  • Industrial wastewater treatment (pharmaceutical, textile, chemical, refinery, and food industries)
  • Municipal STPs for sewage management
  • Anaerobic digestion systems for biogas generation

This article will focus on the core use of biocultures, the science behind it and how prominent it is.

Why do we need Biocultures?

This is one of the most common questions asked. Let’s first understand why we need external microorganisms when we still have a biological system with a biomass in a wastewater treatment plant. The “workforce” of any waste treatment system is its biomass. In a dynamic state of flux, different microorganisms perish while others proliferate and become more prevalent.

Under extreme circumstances, such as toxic shock, some bacterial populations may be reduced or eliminated, resulting in poor effluent quality. Historically, waste treatment strategies have been slow to recover in such scenarios. In the aeration basin of a typical industrial waste treatment plant, one would expect to find a wide range of bacterial species or strains.

This bacterial diversity is essential because different types of bacteria digest different substances more effectively and efficiently. Regrettably, the vast majority of industrial waste treatment systems never achieve long-term stability. The quantity & the quality of entering wastewater normally vary on a weekly or sometimes even daily basis.

These variances might be caused by batch process production, schedules, chemical spills in the manufacturing plant, ineffective plant equipment, ETP design, process management or human errors. The reality is that biological populations in many treatment facilities never reach optimal numbers or a variety of species. Without bioaugmentation/bioremediation, the indigenous population should be made up of a diverse range of species.

Some of these organisms degrade organic substances more efficiently and effectively than others, generating a settleable biomass. Hence such organisms/microbes are selected and combined into a product called as biocultures, which are then added into the biological systems of a wastewater treatment plant.

Biocultures benefits:
  • Indigenous microbes often fail under extreme conditions (toxic loads, variable pH, high salinity).
  • Biocultures provide robust microbial strains that stabilize the biomass.
  • They ensure faster recovery from shock loads, maintain MLSS:MLVSS ratios, and improve settleability of sludge.
  • They help achieve compliance with PCB, CPCB, and NGT norms for effluent discharge.

How do Biocultures work?

Ideally, the biomass is divided into three populations: Population A (desired indigenous microbes), Population B (other indigenous microbes), and Population C (selected robust microbes). The bioaugmentation/bioremediation program’s purpose is to add bioculture with selected microbial strains to boost Population A’s development, establish the selected robust microbial strains of Population C and reduce Population B. This helps us achieve both the quality and quantity of the bacterial population in a biological system.

Bioaugmentation before and after (1)

Understanding the mechanism of microbes

The microbes remove or degrade organic pollutants through enzymes, following a particular mechanism that is distinct for every kind of pollutant such as :

  1. Carbon removal:


    In wastewater, biodegradable organics are mostly in the form of carbon that contribute to COD/BOD, such as sugars, starches, fats/oils/grease, proteins, alcohols, etc.). Heterotrophic bacteria reduce these organics for energy and cell generation. Here, one portion of carbon is transformed into CO2 + H2O and assimilated by the rest into biomass (MLSS/MLVSS).


Carbon removal process

The above flowchart explains the general pathway of carbon removal by microorganisms through both aerobic and anaerobic mechanisms.

Biocultures with a combination of microbes that secrete hydrolytic enzymes, such as lipase, Oxygenases, and dehydrogenases, etc., are used in carbon removal

2. Nitrogen Removal: The nitrogen removal pathway consists of two steps:

  • Nitrification: In this step, ammonia is converted first into nitrite and then into nitrate in the presence of oxygen by nitrifying bacteria.
  • Denitrification: In this process, the nitrate is converted into nitrogen gas in low quantities or in the absence of oxygen.

The complete process is popularly called the anoxic process. Biocultures with a combination of microbes, such as nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria, are used for nitrogen removal.

Nitrogen removal

 

3. Anaerobic Digestion: It is a four-stage biological process.

 

  • Hydrolysis: In hydrolysis, specialised microbes release enzymes (lipases, proteases, amylases) that cleave the macromolecules into simpler compounds such as fatty acids, amino acids, and sugars.
  • Acidogenesis: Acidogenic bacteria convert these compounds into VFA (acids), alcohols, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide
  • Acetogenesis: The VFAs and alcohols are further converted by syntrophic bacteria into acetic acid, H2 and CO
  • Methanogenesis: Methanogenic archaea consume acetate, hydrogen, and CO₂ to produce methane-rich biogas. This is the energy-harvesting stage, yielding about 55–70% methane in the gas stream, which can be used in boilers, combined heat and power (CHP), or upgraded to biomethane.

Anaerobic Digestion

4. Phosphorus removal:

Phosphate Removal Cycle:

  1. Anaerobic zone: In the lack of oxygen, PAOs take up VFA (acetate/Propionate) for energy.
  2. Aerobic Zone: these PAOs with stored energy then take up PO4-P, and then they are removed by wasting the sludge.

So, in this process, the pollutants are not degraded but absorbed by microbes, which are introduced through biocultures.

These biocultures are directly introduced into the biological tanks where they are either kept in suspended growth or with biofilm carriers or media to enhance surface area for reaction.

Environmental Factors to be considered:

ParameterAerobic (carbon removal)Aerobic (nitrification)Anoxic (denitrification)Anaerobic / EBPR-anaerobicAnaerobic digestion (methanogenic)
DO2.0–3.0 mg/L≥2.0 mg/L (≥1.5 absolute minimum)<0.2 mg/L (ideally ~0.0)≈0.0 mg/L0.0 mg/L
pH6.5–8.57.0–8.0 (nitrifiers slow <6.8)6.8–8.26.8–7.46.8–7.4
Temp20–35 °C20–32 °C (rate drops <15 °C)15–35 °C18–30 °C30–38 °C (mesophilic)
ORP (guide)>+50 to +250 mV>+100 mV−50 to +50 mV<−100 mV (EBPR anaerobic often −100 to −200)<−300 mV
Alkalinity80–150 mg/L as CaCO₃Ensure 7.14 mg CaCO₃ per mg NH₄-N oxidized; keep effluent >50–80 mg/LRecovered in denite2,000–5,000 mg/L (buffering)
NutrientsBOD:N:P ≈ 100:5:1N is already present; ensure enough P.Carbon source available (rbCOD)VFA supply (acetate/propionate)Trace metals for methanogens

Types of Biocultures and Formulation:

The biocultures are generally classified into 3 types:

  1. Aerobic consortia – for COD/BOD reduction in food, beverage, and municipal wastewater.
  2. Anoxic blends – for denitrification in industrial wastewater streams.
  3. Anaerobic consortia – for high-COD wastewater and methane generation in refineries, distilleries, and pharmaceuticals.

The following table gives a clear explanation:

AspectAerobic consortiaAnoxic blendsAnaerobic consortia
Main jobFast carbon (BOD/COD) removal; support nitrificationDenitrification (NO₃⁻/NO₂⁻ → N₂);
Conversion to nitrogen from nitrate/nitrite 
High-strength COD removal with biogas (CH₄) production
Electron acceptorO₂NO₃⁻ / NO₂⁻ (no free O₂)None (strictly reducing); methanogenesis uses CO₂ as sink
Typical microbesHeterotrophs (e.g., Bacillus, Pseudomonas, Comamonas), plus nitrifiers (Nitrosomonas/Nitrospira)Heterotrophic denitrifiers (Paracoccus, Thauera, Pseudomonas), DPAOsHydrolytic/acidogenic bacteria (Clostridium spp.), syntrophs, methanogens (Methanosaeta, Methanosarcina)
Key enzymes/pathsAmylase, protease, lipase; glycolysis → TCANitrate/nitrite reductases; NO₃⁻ → NO₂⁻ → N₂O → N₂Hydrolysis → acidogenesis → acetogenesis → methanogenesis
Best-fit wastesFood & beverage, municipal, tanneries (carbon), commercial kitchens (FOG with lipase-rich blends)Any stream with nitrate from upstream nitrification; low-O₂ polishing zones, tertiary denite filtersDistilleries/ethanol, dairy whey, slaughterhouse, leachate, refinery waste, UASB/EGSB start-ups, digesters
Where to doseEqualization (pre-hydrolysis) and aeration; wet MBBR mediaPre-anoxic/anoxic zone (keep O₂ out)EQ/acidogenic tank or digester feed; not in aerated zones
Operating windowDO 2–3 mg/L; pH 6.5–8.5; ORP >+50 mV; 20–35 °CDO <0.2 mg/L; ORP −50 to +50 mV; pH 6.8–8.2; 15–35 °C; needs rbCODORP <−300 mV; pH 6.8–7.4; 30–38 °C (meso) or 50–55 °C (thermo)
ProsQuick results, odor control, robust to moderate shocks; simple controlSaves aeration/alkalinity; couples well with nitrification/EBPREnergy-positive, lowest sludge yield, handles very high COD
Cons/risksAeration cost; more sludge; nitrifiers sensitive to toxins/low tempNeeds nitrate and carbon; oxygen leakage kills rate; nitrite accumulation riskSlow start-up; sensitive to solvents/sulfides/salts; temperature dependency; potential odors if upset
Success KPIsDownstream COD/BOD drop, stable DO, good SVI/settlingNOx removal across anoxic, alkalinity recovery, minimal gas bubblesRising biogas (CH₄ %), VFA/alkalinity in control, COD removal ↑, foam/odour under control

Biocultures Manufacturing Process

Being a leading manufacturer of biocultures, we can explain the process as below:

Strain sourcing & Safety: Performance-proven strains are selected on the basis of substrate profile and range, growth rate, pH tolerance, temperature, salinity, and surfactants. Mostly, a master working cell bank under controlled storage is maintained with records.

  • Bench Characterisation: Typically, benchtop reactors are in-shaken along with mapping growth curves and profiling of enzymes. Parameters or set points, such as temperature, pH, and the DO control band, are also considered, which vary with every strain.
  • Scale-up (production): The strain is then transferred from bench reactors or flasks to larger volume fermenters, which are already sterilised.
  • Harvest & stabilisation: Harvest is done by centrifugation or microfiltration, followed by stabilisation depending upon the product’s form:
  • Powders: carriers such as maltodextrin, mineral clay, zeolite + protectants (trehalose, skim solids) are mixed, followed by dry spraying.
  • Liquids: buffered media is used.
  • Encapsulated/blocks: entrap

Where Biocultures are Used: Sector-wise applications

 

1. Food and Beverage (dairy, breweries, soft drinks, bakeries):

  • Effluent Profile: readily degradable organic COD in high content in the form of lactose, proteins, sugars and FOG
  • Major issues: Sudden/burst foaming, morning/evening shock loads, ammonia carryover when nitrification lags.
  • Bioculture Consortia used: Mostly enzyme-rich aerobic consortia that are rich in hydrolytic enzymes ( amylase, proteases, lipase) are used to accelerate hydrolysis. Nitrifiers are used in case of ammonia.
  • Microbial Mechanism: Faster conversion of colloids to soluble carbons. Healthy floc formation occurs with robust and stable biomass development.

 

2. Pulp and Paper:

  • Effluent Profile: High COD effluent with colour, lignin/cellulose fractions and heavy foaming issues.
  • Pain Points: Lignin is one of the toughest components to degrade; hence, biodegradability is low. Colour is also a prominent factor that is very hard to reduce.
  • Bioculture consortia used: Consortia with microbes that secrete enzymes such as Laccases, lignin peroxidases, along with other hydrolytic enzymes are used.
  • Microbial mechanism: the polymers of lignin are cleaved by enzymes, and co-metabolism degrades colour concentration.

3. Textile & Dye

  • Effluent Profile: Consists of dyestuff, common surfactants, high temperature, reactive and non-reactive dyes components.
  • Issues: prominence of refractory colour, which is a visible pollution indicator, along with nitrite spikes. High temperature up to 55°C kills normal native microbes.
  • Bioculture consortia used: Consortia with microbes that secrete enzymes such as reductases, peroxidases, along with other hydrolytic enzymes are used, which should be thermophilic in nature to enhance stability and performance in high temperatures.
  • Microbial Mechanism: the thermophilic bacteria that are viable in high-temperature easily degrade dyestuffs and color.

4. Pharmaceuticals & APIs:

  • Effluent Profile: Consists of inhibitory intermediates, solvents, high ORP swings, high Ammonia, and refractory COD.
  • Issues: high toxicity, long accumulation, shock loads, ammonia spikes and low settling in clarifiers.
  • Bioculture consortia used: Biocultures with De-Tox tolerate blend, a few bacillus strains and nitrifiers can be used.
  • Microbial Mechanism: Biofilm formation, along with EPS binding buffers toxicity, while the bacillus and other strains degrade refractory COD. For Ammoniacal nitrogen nitrifiers in the presence of oxygen, perform the function of nitrification, followed by denitrification by denitrifying strains.

5. Chemical manufacturing (Paints, resins, surfactants):

  • Effluent Profile: Consists of solvents, surfactants, Cyclic-chain compounds, Aldehydes, & Phenols.
  • Issues: high toxicity, shock loads, high TDS, low COD/BOD degrading efficiency.
  • Bioculture consortia used: Biocultures with De-Tox tolerate blend, a few bacillus strains and nitrifiers can be used.
  • Microbial Mechanism: Biofilm formation, along with EPS binding buffers toxicity, while the bacillus and other strains degrade refractory COD.

 

6. Petrochemical/refineries:

  • Effluent Profile: prominence of alkanes, Aromatics, emulsified oil and specifically PHA
  • Issues: surfactant interactions, emulsion that passes without degradation, inducing odour, high PHA at outlets affecting efficiency, even loss of sludge blanket in the UASB process and low methanogenesis.
  • Bioculture consortia used: Biocultures with hydrocarbon-degrading as well as lipase-producing strains, anaerobic strains with similar properties for UASBs.
  • Microbial Mechanism: The enzymes, such as mono/di oxygenases, crack hydrocarbons, lipases split triglycerides and PHAs. The Anaerobic strains form heavy flocs that can settle at the bottom to strengthen the sludge blanket.

 

Case Studies:


  1. Pharmaceutical(API) company in Gujrat:


Challenges:

The COD, BOD and Ammoniacal Nitrogen were always high above the discharge limits in spite of having a high amount of MLSS & MLVSS in all their aeration tanks. The EHS department of the industry was under pressure to maintain the parameters as per the PCB norms.  Some consultants had also suggested having an MBR after the ASP process, which unfortunately was not providing the desired output.

ETP Flow chart:

Primary- Biological and Tertiary systems, with RO & MEE. The activated sludge process (ASP) has 3 aeration tanks in series and one anoxic tank before the aeration tanks.

Flow:200 m3/day
Inlet COD:14,000 to 17,000 ppm
Inlet Ammoniacal Nitrogen:280 to 320 ppm
COD outlet after biological treatment:9000 to 12000 ppm
Ammoniacal Nitrogen after biological treatment220 to 270 ppm

 

Bioculture Selection and Dosing

A blend of microbial strains that were capable of degrading recalcitrant compounds, aromatics, phenols and long-chain carbons was created and incorporated into bioculture, which was dosed in the aeration tanks for 8 weeks.

Results:

Results and discussions:

  • 91 % reduction in COD and 75% reduction in TAN levels after 60 days and today the COD is in the range of 500 to 450 ppm in their biological outlet.

  1. EBPR-Phosphate removal:


A prominent chemical manufacturing unit situated in MP near Ratlam wanted to treat an effluent stream with a high phosphate content of up to 1500-2000 ppm. They wanted to use their old ETP, revive it, commission it, and make it efficient for phosphate treatment.

1st Phase: Scrutiny
  • OLD ETP details:

The ETP had primary treatment, biological treatment (Anaerobic), and then a tertiary treatment.

Flow (current)350 KLD
Type of processUASB
No. of UASBR1
Capacity of biological tank950 KL

Parameters of the stream with Phosphate:

Parameters Avg. Inlet parameters(PPM)
COD4300
Phosphate Content1500-1800
TDS3000
2nd Phase: The Blueprint

After scrutiny, it was concluded to transform the old ETP apparatus into an EBPR unit, i.e., Enhanced Biological Phosphorus removal unit, which involves the introduction of PAOs (polyphosphate-accumulating bacteria) into the biological system along with physico-chemical treatment in primary and tertiary systems, respectively, of the old ETP.

ETP process optimisation:

An efficient EBPR unit requires anaerobic as well as aerobic systems, as in anaerobic, the RbCODs get transferred into VFAs, which are then absorbed by PAOs for efficient phosphate uptake, which is dispersed during the anaerobic process. The PAOs then absorb the phosphate rapidly in the aerobic system. Hence, biomass with phosphate-absorbed PAOs is allowed to settle in the clarifier, and then WAS is removed.

In this scenario, the ETP had a UASB system, but no Aeration system, hence:

  1. We utilised a spare tank of capacity 300 KL located next to USABR, and transformed it into an aeration tank by installing diffusers.
  2. After our recommendation, the industry installed a 50 KL FRP clarifier after the sedimentation system.

Hence, the old ETP now had a facultative EBPR system.

3rd Phase: Technology and Execution
  1. Selecting biocultures:

For UASB:

The perfect solution for an Anaerobic system consists of robust bacteria that can efficiently work in anaerobic conditions, leveraging efficiency in terms of:

  • COD reduction
  • Biomass Generation
  • Methane Generation
  • F/M ratio optimization

Here, since the goal was phosphate reduction, we amalgamated PAOs as well, which made the product extremely effective to be used in the developed EBPR system.

For Aerobic Tank:

Highly robust and selective strains of bacteria, which, when combined with PAOs.

Results:

After 60 days of implementation:

Parameters Primary OutletUASB OutletClarifier Outlet
COD39001900800
Phosphate1300-1500850-900180
COD Reduction10 %~ 55 %82 %
Phosphate reduction %8-10%~ 65 %~85-90%

Supporting Conditions for Biocultures in Wastewater Treatment:

  • Essential Parameters to be maintained:
  1. DO: 1.5 to 3 is essential in an aerobic process to produce the best results from biocultures for wastewater treatment.
  2. pH: Neutral pH is recommended, but the range between 6.5 and 8 is preferable.
  3. Temperature: The ideal range for optimum performance should be 20-35 °C, but some thermophilic strains can thrive up to 55 °C
  4. ORP: For anaerobic, it should be between -100 and -300 mV.
  • Feed & Nutrients:
  1. Carbon removal: For aerobic carbon removal, aim BOD:N:P ≈ 100:5:1 (by mass)
  2. For denitrification: Keep a readily biodegradable carbon source: rule-of-thumb-3-6 g COD/g of NOx-N removed.
  3. For EBPR: ensure adequate VFAs (acetate) in the anaerobic zone.
  • Dissolved Oxygen & Redox Zoning:
  1. Aerobic system: 1.5-2 ppm DO
  2. Nitrification: 2-3 ppm DO
  3. Anoxic: DO between 0.2 and 0.8 ppm
  4. Anaerobic/EBPR Anaerobic: 0 ppm

 

  • SRT, HRT & loading (F/M)
  1. SRT(solids retention time) should be around 6-12 days for COD removal, 15-25 days for Nitrogen removal.
  2. F/M ratio should be between 0.15 and 0.35.
  3. SVI; healthy range should be between 80-150 mL/g
  4. Control RAS and wasting to keep MLSS/SVI in range.
  5. Add/strengthen selector zones if filaments rise; avoid over-aeration that strips CO₂ and spikes pH.
  • Micronutrients & trace metals
  1. Trace Fe, Mg, Ca, K, Na, Mn, Zn, Cu, Mo, Co, Ni, are some of the essential micronutrients.
  2. They support enzyme functions, floc formation, methanogenesis, etc.

Apart from these points, biocultures should be stored in a cool and dry place.

FAQs of Biocultures

1.How long before I see COD/BOD improvements?

The ideal time when improvements are observed is within 72 hrs in ideal conditions; however, 7 days in maximum time for visible improvements.

2.Will they work in high Salinity?

Only biocultures with halophilic strains can survive high TDS above 30000 ppm; others get their cell walls ruptured in high salinity.

3.What if influent composition changes daily?

Multiple stream effluents should be equalised first, and a bioculture with multiple strains can work. This process is called bioaugmentation.

4.Can biocultures reduce sludge volume meaningfully?

Yes, they can reduce the sludge meaningfully; however, HRT, SRT and wasting are important factors to be tracked as well.

5.Do I need to stop chemicals when using biocultures?

Chemicals for primary treatment, especially for pH control and coagulation-flocculation, are necessary; however, effective biocultures can reduce their quantity to some extent.

6.Can I use them in grease traps/septic at small facilities?

Yes, biocultures with FOG-degrading strains can be used.

7.Any red flags when buying biocultures?

A vendor/manufacturer giving fake guarantees without studying and analysing the problem of your wastewater treatment plant.

Conclusion:

Nature’s best healing mechanism, i.e microbes, is simple yet extremely effective, especially for wastewater treatment. They are very tiny in size but mighty in effect, and when the right combination of such microbes is created, 60% of wastewater treatment problems are solved.  Biocultures for wastewater treatment are proven and effective technologies that have been with us forever, but we have realised their potential in the wastewater sector very late, and it is still misunderstood and unexplored.

Refrences

Guidelines-UTE-Irrigation.pdf

7thEditionPollutionControlLawSeries2021.pdf

Images:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/347981511/figure/fig3/AS:975158504329216@1609507313214/Four-steps-in-the-anaerobic-digestion-process-Zhang-et-al-2014.png

Biological nitrogen removal processes in wastewater treatment (Metcalf and  | Download Scientific Diagram

Anaerobic process of wastewater treatment depicting both… | Download Scientific Diagram

 
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Thermophilic vs Mesophilic Anaerobic Wastewater Treatment in Industries

The anaerobic treatment of wastewater heavily relies on trends, and unfortunately, adaptation and innovation are very slow in progression compared to rising pollution. 

Although we are all talking about the use of AIs, sensors, IOTs, and efficient hardware, unfortunately, when we consider the industrial wastewater treatment,and broader industrial effluent treatment, we are still stuck at the same processes we were 30 years ago. If you would like to know how we are optimising wastewater treatment methods in diverse environments, feel free to connect with us today.

There needs to be a continuous update at the process level, because 99 % anaerobic plants are mesophilic, i.e, work at a temperature of 30-38 *c. In regards to biocultures for wastewater treatment, the mesophilic treatment is prominent; however, the thermophilic treatment is much more effective and compatible. 

Although it is an uncommon type of ETP water treatment, when it comes to tough-to-degrade effluents such as those with recalcitrant COD, or those with phenols, Aldehydes, etc., the thermophilic microbes treatment can be a game changer in anaerobic digestion.

This blog explores when it makes sense to shift from mesophilic to thermophilic wastewater systems, the practical advantages and challenges, and what it means for plant operators and environmental engineers.

Let us start with the basics:

Parameter Mesophilic (30–38°C) Thermophilic (50–60°C)
Microbial growth rate Moderate High
Biogas yield Moderate Higher (10–25% increase)
Pathogen kill Limited Excellent (>99%)
Energy input required Lower Higher
Process stability High Sensitive to changes
Start-up time Shorter Longer

The core of the thermophilic system lies in its high-energy fast result mechanism. The hydrolysis process is much faster, resulting in increased metabolic rate and superior pathogen control in biological wastewater treatment.

Issues where thermophilic treatment can be effective:
  1. High-Strength Industrial Wastewaters:

Effluents from industries such as dairies, food processing, slaughterhouses, distilleries and starch industries have higher levels of protiens, lipids, and polysaccharides. Thermophilic systems hydrolyze and degrade these faster, leading to:

  • Higher COD, BOD degrading efficiency.
  • Higher biogas production
  • Shorter HRT (hydraulic retention time)
  • Enhanced treatment of high-strength wastewater

2. Excess Sludge and Biomass Handling Issues:

  • While most mesophilic anaerobic systems produce higher sludge, the thermophilic system produces lower quantities of excess sludge and reduces volatile solids.

3. Strict Pathogen and Odor Control

  • The thermophilic systems give 99% pathogen elimination in STP/Centralized ETPs that handle fecal sludge or pathogen prone waste, which is crucial if:
  • Sludge is reused in agriculture
  • Water is recycled for non-potable uses
  • Especially relevant for optimized wastewater microbiome management

4. Waste Heat:

  • In case of high waste steam, condensate, or cogeneration (CHP) units, the thermal energy can be internally sourced.
  • This supports efficient energy recovery within the plant
Microbial Diversification: Fragility Meets Efficiency

In case of the microbial cultures for wastewater treatment, the thermophilic microbes are completely different from mesophilic ones. Although thermophiles are fewer but are formidable with higher metabolic abilities in the organic waste degradation.

Key Observations:

  • Thermophilic methanogens are more sensitive to pH, VFA spikes, and loading rates.
  • Shock loads (especially of fats, solvents, or salts) can cause faster crashes.
  • Granular sludge formation is more difficult at thermophilic temperatures; biofilms or hybrid systems are better suited.
Biogas enhancement: Quantitative and Qualitative

Thermophilic systems offer 10-25 % higher biogas yield per unit COD removed. More importantly, the methane content is often higher (up to 70-75%) compared to 60-65% in mesophilic digestion.

This makes the Thermophilic process enticing where:

  • On-site biogas is used for power/steam
  • Fossil fuel replacement is a business or ESG goal
  • Carbon credit mechanisms or green energy policies apply
  • Also aligns with zero liquid discharge (ZLD) and carbon neutrality efforts
Operational & Engineering Challenges in sewage treatment process

1. Temperature maintenance:

Temperature maintenance is the key of thermophilic processes, which is altogether challenging both technically and economically, especially in large tanks and in colder environments. 

2. Narrower process Window

Thermophiles work in a smaller range.  Any variation in:

  • pH (ideal: 7.2-7.6)
  • Alkalinity ratio (IA/TA < 0.3 )
  • VFA accumulation

Can lead to performance drops

3. Start-Up Lag

Thermophilic start-up can take 30-60 days, requiring:

  • Seeding with adapted sludge
  • Step-wise temperature ramping
  • High monitoring effort

4. Foaming & Scum

Due to high gas production and surfactant sensitivity, thermophilic systems foam more easily, especially during acidification.

Know the Process, Not just the Temperature:

To be precise, a thermophilic system is not for every ETP (Eluent treatment plant), however, it is effective for any ETP where it is applied. It no doubt is high energy, difficult in operations, and with fragile microbial populations, but it always outpaces mesophilic treatment in COD/BOD control, methane gas production, and cleaner sludge.

et, it’s not a plug-and-play upgrade. You must rethink your sludge management, monitoring protocols, nutrient balancing, and energy integration.

The question isn’t whether thermophilic digestion works—it’s whether your plant is ready to manage the precision and potential that comes with it.”

If you’re designing or upgrading an anaerobic system and want to make it future-proof—especially for energy recovery or zero-liquid discharge (ZLD) ambitions—don’t ignore the thermophilic path. Just walk it carefully.

Partner with Team One Biotech for expert guidance in optimizing your ETP’s aeration and biological treatment processes. Our tailored bioculture solutions and technical expertise ensure enhanced treatment efficiency in anaerobic digestion and wastewater microbiome optimization.

Learn more at www.teamonebiotech.com or reach out at sales@teamonebiotech.com/8855050575

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D Flo – Drain Cleaning, Nalla Bioremediation Cleaning, Biofilm, Microbial Consortia, Polluted Water Channels

Biofilm formation is a paramount component for the bioremediation of open drains, flowing water systems like rivers, water channels, or man-made conduits etc. The formation of biofilms for these water bodies ascertains a mechanism for the attachment and activity of microbes which support the breakdown of organic material and industrial pollutants to clean up the water.

Team One Biotech’s D-Flo is a powerful consortium of strains of bacteria that enhance the process of formation of good biofilm in open drains. The bio solution has been designed to promote a stable and protected environment for the microorganisms. The microbes consume the organic pollutants as nutrients for sustenance and also release enzymes that degrade the pollutants and contaminants present in water to simpler less harmful substances.

Several factors influence the formation of biofilms in open drainage systems. Environmental stresses such as changes in temperature, pH, or nutrient availability immensely impact the build-up of a protective matrix (biofilm) that shields the microbes. T1B D-Flo operates tenaciously in these adverse conditions as well.

T1B D-Flo | Microbial Cultures For Open Drains, Storm Drainage System – Suppresses Foul Odours , impact of Bio Film in running wastewater

 Drain Cleaning – Nalla Bioremediation – Nalla Cleaning – Treatment Of Flowing Waste Water – Polluted Water Channels – Biofilm – Microbial Consortia – Microbial Inoculants – Microbial Enzymes – Biosurfactants – Aerobic Bacteria – Anaerobic Bacteria – Facultative Bacteria – Bio Enzyme – Enzymes – Bio Culture Bacteria Solutions – Bio Enhancer – Microbial Inoculant – Bioculture Product – Nallah Bioremediation

Anaerobio Bacteria & Treatment – Microbial Culture, Bio Culture & Product, Digestion, Wastewater, Microorganisms, Baffled Reactors (ABRs), Anaerobic Filter

Team One Biotech’s Anaerobio is a unique combination of anaerobic & facultative bacteria like methanogenic bacteria, acidogenic and acetogenic and hydrolytic bacteria that break down the organic waste sludge in the wastewater treatment process in absence of oxygen.

The microbiome mixture is highly efficacious in reducing organic pollutants and industrial waste materials into methane and reducing the generation of hydrogen sulphide gas thereby increasing the productivity of wastewater treatment plants and furnishing higher output of biogas.

Biomass carryover in an anaerobic digestion process is a widely common concern. It is extremely important that the biomass is healthy with matured flocs. This helps the bacteria to maintain a good sludge blanket inside the reactor. T1B Anaerobio moderates the sludge blanket formation at the bottom of the wastewater tank or clarifier. This allows the removal of small dirt particles, metals, and simpler compounds from the wastewater.

T1B Anaerobio supports all type of anaerobic digesters to control its biomass carryover

T1B Anaerobio | Consortium Of Microbes To Process Anaerobic Digestion, Hydrolysis – Can Be Used In Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket Reactor

 Anaerobic Bacteria – Anaerobic Microbial Culture – Anaerobic Bio Culture – Anaerobic Bio Product – Anaerobic Treatment – Anaerobic Digestion – Anaerobic Wastewater Treatment – Anaerobic Filter – Anaerobic Microorganisms – Anaerobic Baffled Reactors (ABRs) – Microbial Strains – Biodegradation – Bioreactor – Methane Production – Organic Matter Removal – Wastewater Treatment – Microbial Consortia – Biogas – Acidogenesis – Methanogenesis – Hydrolysis – Microbial Community – Biomethanation – Temperature – Alkalinity – Sludge Break Down – Removal Of Organic Volatile Compounds VOC’s – Biogas Production – Acetogenesis – Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket Digestion – UASB – Diverse Range Of Bacteria – Advanced Biochemicals – Hydrogen Sulfide And Methane – Bio Digester – Sludge Blanket – Sludge Wasting – Biomass Carryover – Improve Methane Generation – lower Hydrogen Sulfide Production – Enzyme – Bacteria And Enzyme Production – Bio Enzyme For Biogas – Anaerobic lagoon – EGSB (Expanded Granular Sludge Bed) Reactor – Fluidized Bed Reactors – Breakdown Of Organic Matter In The Absence Of Oxygen – Consortium Of Microorganisms – Renewable Energy – Wastewater Treatment – AD Process – Microbial Digestion – Digestate – Green Energy – Energy Efficiency – AD Technology

STP – Odour Control, Odour Reduction, Cheap BIoproducts, Powder Bioproduct, Liquid Bioproduct, Bio Culture For Sewage Treatment Plant

Several factors can undermine the effectiveness and efficiency of a sewage treatment plant. Factors such as composition (high levels of organic matter, nutrients or toxicity) of sewage wastes, higher temperatures that can reinforce microbial activity that breaks down organic sludge, hydraulic retention time, adequate oxygen supply to support microbial growth, and appropriate alkalinity of wastewater are among the most common ones.

It naturally becomes vital that any microbial formulation added to any STP can work through these variables. Team One Biotech’s “T1B STP” is a consortium of resilient & robust bacteria that facilitate the biodegradation of sewage wastes & organic pollutants by converting them into carbon dioxide, water and smaller biodegradable compounds.

T1B STP controls the formation of excessive organic sludge by rapidly degrading it. It also improves the settling rate of activated sludge for filtration and settling processes.

Longer retention time although allows for a more thorough treatment, it also increases the risk of odours and the growth of harmful organisms. T1B STP specializes in controlling filamentous bacterial growth in sewage management and also eliminates odours.

With its many beneficial properties like the high potency of reducing BOD, COD and ammonia, improving conditions for better floc formations, and controlling sludge bulking and excess foaming T1B STP applications are many. T1B STP microbial formulation can be used in any sewage treatment plant, sewer lines, STP pumping stations, municipal waste disposals and even for compact plants in housing complexes, hospitals etc.

T1B STP | Bacteria Consortia For Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) – For Sewage Odor Control, Organic Sludge Reduction, Sludge Bioremediation

STP Odour Control – Odour Reduction In STP – Cheap Bioproducts For STP – Powder Bioproduct For STP – liquid Bioproduct For STP – Bio Culture For Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) – Powder Stp Sewage Treatment Plant Bio Culture – Bio STP – STP Culture – STP Bio Culture – Sewage Treatment Plant Chemicals – Biological Culture For Sewage Treatment Plant – Sewage Treatment Plant – Sewage Treatment – Biocultures For Sewage – Sewage Biocultures – Sewage Bacteria – Microbial Product For Sewage Treatment – Sewage Bioremediation – Odour Control In Sewage – STP Odour Control – Sludge Reduction – Reuse Of Sewage – Grey Water Treatment – Black Water Treatment – Sludge Reduction – Electricity Savings – Chemical For Sewage Treatment – Urine Treatment – FOG In Sewage – Bio Treatment Of Sewage – Sewage Sludge – Activated Sludge – Microbial Consortia – Microbial Inoculants – Bioreactor – Anaerobic Digestion – Nutrient Removal – Ammonia Oxidation – Denitrification – Phosphorus Removal – Microbial Enzymes – Biosurfactants – Aerobic Bacteria – Anaerobic Bacteria – Facultative Bacteria – Bio Enzyme – Enzymes – COD Removal – BOD Removal – Ammoniacal Nitrogen Removal – Sludge Degradation – Removing Oils, Fats And Grease – Reduces Aeration Requirement – Enzyme Producing Microbes – Enzyme Producing bacteria – Naturally Occurring Microbes – Bio Culture Bacteria Solutions – Enzyme Solutions – Bio Enhancer – Microbial Inoculum – Probiotic Bacteria – Municipal Waste Water Treatment – Bioculture Product – MLSS Development – Eco-Friendly Method Of Sewage Treatment

Wastewater & Environment – Aerobic, Anaerobic, Facultative,Enzyme Producing,Bio Culture Bacteria Solutions

Microbial culture is a useful tool for treating municipal waste and industrial waste that are contaminated or toxic. By using their metabolic processes, oxidation, nitrification and denitrification capabilities, these microbes can break down the organic matter and industrial effluents into simpler substances that they can use for their own growth and survival.

The T1B bacterial cultures bring with them a range of crucial benefits and advantages. Some of them can be summarised as follows:

  • Reduction of BOD or Biological Oxygen Demand in the wastewater system. A high BOD indicates that organic materials are not being removed properly.
  • Reduction of Total Suspended Solids (TSS) levels. TSS is a measure of the number of suspended solid contaminants in wastewater. A higher TSS level is counterproductive to the efficient working of a wastewater treatment plant.
  • Maintaining an optimum pH level of the wastewater treatment process.
  • Disintegration and degradation of ammonical nitrogen, nitrates and phosphates and other harmful compounds. The microbiome solutions work efficiently to prevent the eutrophication caused by algal bloom due to excess nutrients in water bodies.
  • Control of unpleasant odours and gases release from volatile organic compounds commonly called VOCs.
  • Enable and upgrade optimum conditions for flocculation conditions essential for sedimentation, creaming or filtration processes in wastewater.
  • Withstand shock loads and hydraulic loads and many more

The microbiome cultures can be applied to wastewater systems (WWTPs), municipal waste concentration, sewage treatment plants (STP) and effluent treatment plants (ETP), various types of bioreactors and biodigesters and for both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Bioremediation plays a pivotal role in treating effluents and contaminants before the wastewater can be released into the oceans, rivers or lakes.

Since the conditions and processes vary in nature, the microbial consortium under the wastewater and environment vertical of TOB comprises various types of bacteria species. Separate products have been formulated with aerobic bacteria and anaerobic bacteria that can work optimally in aerobic conditions or anaerobic treatment steps as applicable.

The process to add microorganisms to the secondary treatment of wastewater is referred to as activated sludge treatment. This is after the primary treatment of wastewater treatment process. During the aerobic activated sludge treatment process, the wastewater treatment plant is subjected to an aeration process wherein air is pumped into the treatment tank to provide oxygen to microorganisms.

The microbiomes use the organic matter present in wastewater as a food source converting it into carbon dioxide, water and new microbial cells. The organic pollutants are thus decomposed and removed from wastewater. Nitrification and denitrification are biological processes that occur in wastewater treatment plants. Nitrification is the conversion of ammonia to nitrate by aerobic bacteria. Denitrification is the reduction of nitrate to nitrogen gas by anaerobic bacteria. These processes help remove nitrogen from wastewater and prevent eutrophication in receiving waters..

For Efficient Treatment Of Wastewater, Industrial Effluents, Sewage, fecal sludge, septic tanks, rivers, polluted lakes, ponds, solid waste composting, biomining, oil spills, FOG degradation, odour control, soil bioremediation – Microbe Based Bio-Solutions

Microbial consortia – Microbial Inoculants – Microbial Enzymes – Biosurfactants – Aerobic Bacteria – Anaerobic Bacteria – Facultative Bacteria – Bio Enzyme – Enzymes – Removing Oils, Fats and Grease – Enzyme Producing Microbes – Enzyme Producing Bacteria – Naturally Occurring Microbes – Bio Culture Bacteria Solutions – Bio Enhancer – Microbial Inoculum – Bioculture Product – Green Products – Superior Bio-Remediation Products – Active Bioremediation – Natural Bio Products – Best Bio Product 

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