Litcius/Paper detail

Mitigation of Triclocarban Inhibition in Microbial Electrolysis Cell-Assisted Anaerobic Digestion

Sha Long, Xuran Liu, Jun Xiao, Dejiang Ren, Zewei Liu, Qizi Fu, Dandan He, Dongbo Wang

2024Environmental Science & Technology34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Triclocarban (TCC), as a widely used antimicrobial agent, is accumulated in waste activated sludge at a high level and inhibits the subsequent anaerobic digestion of sludge. This study, for the first time, investigated the effectiveness of microbial electrolysis cell-assisted anaerobic digestion (MEC-AD) in mitigating the inhibition of TCC to methane production. Experimental results showed that 20 mg/L TCC inhibited sludge disintegration, hydrolysis, acidogenesis, and methanogenesis processes and finally reduced methane production from traditional sludge anaerobic digestion by 19.1%. Molecular docking revealed the potential inactivation of binding of TCC to key enzymes in these processes. However, MEC-AD with 0.6 and 0.8 V external voltages achieved much higher methane production and controlled the TCC inhibition to less than 5.8%. TCC in the MEC-AD systems was adsorbed by humic substances and degraded to dichlorocarbanilide, leading to a certain detoxification effect. Methanogenic activities were increased in MEC-AD systems, accompanied by complete VFA consumption. Moreover, the applied voltage promoted cell apoptosis and sludge disintegration to release biodegradable organics. Metagenomic analysis revealed that the applied voltage increased the resistance of electrode biofilms to TCC by enriching functional microorganisms (syntrophic VFA-oxidizing and electroactive bacteria and hydrogenotrophic methanogens), acidification and methanogenesis pathways, multidrug efflux pumps, and SOS response.

Topics & Concepts

TriclocarbanAnaerobic digestionMicrobial electrolysis cellChemistryDigestion (alchemy)Anaerobic exerciseMicrobiologyEnvironmental chemistryPulp and paper industryElectrolysisFood scienceChromatographyMethaneTriclosanBiologyMedicineEngineeringElectrolytePhysical chemistryElectrodePhysiologyOrganic chemistryPathologyMicrobial Fuel Cells and BioremediationExtraction and Separation ProcessesAnaerobic Digestion and Biogas Production