A sustainable method developed for ammonium removal from wastewater
Ammonium in wastewater, derived from sources like domestic sewage, industrial waste, agricultural runoff, and landfills, poses serious environmental risks. It can lead to harmful algal blooms, increased water acidity, and oxygen depletion in aquatic ecosystems.
Various methods are available to remove ammonia from the wastewater water. However, they involve oxygenation, which accounts for up to 90% of a treatment plant’s energy consumption.
A research team from Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati led by Prof. Kannan Pakshirajan has developed a new method that drastically cuts down on energy consumption and is simultaneously a sustainable solution. The new technique uses a combination of microalgae and bacteria.
Prof. Pakshirajan and his team has designed a photo-sequencing batch reactor (PSBR), where oxygen produced by microalgae produce during photosynthesis is utilized by nitrifying bacteria to convert ammonium into nitrate, followed by denitrification under anoxic condition using denitrifying bacteria to form nitrogen as the end product . The process eliminated the need for external oxygen aeration, making the process significantly more energy-efficient.
A press release from IIT-Guwahati noted that the system has demonstrated an energy savings of up to 91.33% in comparison to conventional aeration methods used in wastewater treatment plants, making it an eco-friendly and cost-effective alternative.
The research was supported by the Government of India’s Department of Science & Technology’s Fund for Improvement of S&T Infrastructure (DST-FIST) programme. A report on the study has been published in the science journal, Chemical Engineering Journal. The paper was co-authored by Prof. Kannan Pakshirajan from the Department of Bioscience and Bioengineering, and Prof. G. Pugazhenthi from the Department of Chemical Engineering, alongside post-doctoral and research scholars Dr. Arun Sakthivel, Dr. Surjith Ramasamy, and Mr. Sumeet Kheria at IIT Guwahati.
ABOUT IIT GUWAHATI
Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, established in 1994, completed 25 years of glorious existence in 2019. At present, the Institute has eleven departments, nine interdisciplinary academic centres and five schools covering all the major engineering, science, healthcare, management, and humanities disciplines, offering BTech, BDes, BSc(Hons), MA, MDes, MTech, MSc, MS(R), MBA and PhD programmes. The institute offers a residential campus to 455 faculty members and more than 8,600 students at present.
IIT Guwahati has retained the 7th position among the best engineering institutions of the country, 9th position in ‘Overall’ and 10th position in ‘Research’ Categories in the ‘India Rankings 2024’ declared by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) of the Union Ministry of Education.
IIT Guwahati has achieved rank 87 in the SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) globally in the Times Higher Education (THE) Impact Rankings 2024 and is the only academic institution in India that occupied a place among the top 100 world universities – under 50 years of age – ranked by London-based Times Higher Education (THE) in 2014 and continues to maintain its superior position even today in various International Rankings. IIT Guwahati gained rank 32 globally in the ‘Research Citations per Faculty’ category and overall 344 rank in the QS World University Rankings 2025.
Among other frontier areas of research and innovation, IIT Guwahati is working towards augmenting critical science research initiatives in Genomics, Developmental Biology, Health Care and Bioinformatics and Flexible Electronics, among numerous other areas.