Litcius/Paper detail

Reduction of Chromate via Biotic and Abiotic Pathways in the Presence of Three Co-contaminating Electron Acceptors

Min Long, Chen Zhou, Xiong Zheng, Bruce E. Rittmann

2023Environmental Science & Technology12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Bioreduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) is a promising technology for removing Cr(VI), but Cr(VI) reduction alone cannot support microbial growth. This study investigated the reduction of Cr(VI) in the presence of three electron acceptors that typically coexist with Cr(VI): NO 3 –, SO 4 2–, and Fe(III). All three systems could reduce Cr(VI) to Cr(III), but the fate of Cr, its impacts on reduction of the other acceptors, and its impact on the microbial community differed. Although Cr(VI) was continuously removed in the NO 3 – -reduction systems, batch tests showed that denitrification was inhibited primarily through impeding nitrite reduction. The SO 4 2– and Fe(III) reduction systems reduced Cr(VI) using a combination of biotic and abiotic processes. Across all three systems, the abundance of genera capable of reducing Cr(VI) increased following the introduction of Cr(VI). Conversely, the abundance of genera that cannot reduce or resist Cr(VI) decreased, leading to restructuring of the microbial community. Furthermore, the abundance of sulfide oxidizers and Fe(II) oxidizers substantially increased after the introduction of chromate. This study provides fundamental knowledge about how Cr(VI) bioreduction interacts with bioreductions of three other co-contaminating electron acceptors.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryElectron acceptorChromate conversion coatingSulfideEnvironmental chemistryAbiotic componentDenitrificationNitrateElectron donorNitriteHexavalent chromiumMicrobial population biologyRedoxAbundance (ecology)ChromiumInorganic chemistryBacteriaEcologyPhotochemistryCatalysisOrganic chemistryBiologyNitrogenGeneticsChromium effects and bioremediationEnvironmental remediation with nanomaterialsMicrobial Fuel Cells and Bioremediation