Results from the multi-species Benchmark Problem 3 (BM3) using two-dimensional models
                Authored by C Picioreanu, DR Noguera
                
                    Date Published: 2004
                
                
                
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                Abstract
                In addition to the one-dimensional solutions of a multi-species
benchmark problem (BM3) presented earlier (Rittmann et al., 2004), we
offer solutions using two-dimensional (2-D) models. Both 2-D models
(called here DN and CP) used numerical solutions to BM3 based on a
similar mathematical framework of the one-dimensional AQUASIM-built
models submitted by Wanner (model W) and Morgenroth (model M 1), described in detail elsewhere (Rittmann et al., 2004). The CP model used
differential equations to simulate substrate gradients and biomass
growth and a particle-based approach to describe biomass division and
biofilm growth. The DN model simulated substrate and biomass using a
cellular automaton approach. For several conditions stipulated in BM3, the multidimensional models provided very similar results to the 1-D
models in terms of bulk substrate concentrations and fluxes into the
biofilm. The similarity can be attributed to the definition of BM3, which restricted the problem to a flat biofilm in contact with a
completely mixed liquid phase, and therefore, without any salient
characteristics to be captured in a multidimensional domain. On the
other hand, the models predicted significantly different accumulations
of the different types of biomass, likely reflecting differences in the
way biomass spread within the biofilm is simulated.
                
Tags
                
                    Biofilms/