Navyblue
Low maintenance first
Hi,
As discussed in many other thread vodka is used as a carbon source for denitrification bacteria.
Just a thought and my knowledge is very limited in the area of biology. Will probiotic like inulin be generally easier to be utilised by bacteria in relative to ethanol or sucrose? Or it can not be generalised and depends on individual strain of bacteria?
Or is it smaller molecules like ethanol that will be easier to be utilised by bacteria? If such is the case ethanol will be better than sucrose or other sugar?
I've read some articles that water treatment facilities uses coconut husk (made up mainly of cellulose I suppose) as carbon food for denitrification. Just a thought, will it do any good if we bury wooden chip or coconut husk under our DSB for more efficient denitrification (assuming that the material don't leach anything to water)?
Thanks for bearing with so many of my crazy thought
As discussed in many other thread vodka is used as a carbon source for denitrification bacteria.
Just a thought and my knowledge is very limited in the area of biology. Will probiotic like inulin be generally easier to be utilised by bacteria in relative to ethanol or sucrose? Or it can not be generalised and depends on individual strain of bacteria?
Or is it smaller molecules like ethanol that will be easier to be utilised by bacteria? If such is the case ethanol will be better than sucrose or other sugar?
I've read some articles that water treatment facilities uses coconut husk (made up mainly of cellulose I suppose) as carbon food for denitrification. Just a thought, will it do any good if we bury wooden chip or coconut husk under our DSB for more efficient denitrification (assuming that the material don't leach anything to water)?
Thanks for bearing with so many of my crazy thought