4.8 Article

Effect of sulfate on anaerobic reduction of nitrobenzene with acetate or propionate as an electron donor

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 46, Issue 14, Pages 4361-4370

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2012.05.037

Keywords

Nitrobenzene (NB); Reductive transformation; Sulfate; Electron donor; Noncompetitive inhibition; Two-stage zero-order kinetics

Funding

  1. Foundation of the State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, China [PCRRK09004]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [51078284]
  3. Key Special Program on the S&T for the Pollution Control and Treatment of Water Bodies of China [2011ZX07303-002]

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Sulfate is frequently found in wastewaters that contain nitrobenzene. To reveal the effect of sulfate on the reductive transformation of nitrobenzene to aniline - with acetate or propionate as potential electron donors in anaerobic systems - an acetate series (R1-R5) and a propionate series (R6-R10) were set up. Each of these was comprised of five laboratory-scale sequence batch reactors. The two series were amended with the same amount of nitrobenzene and electron donor electron equivalents, whereas with increasing sulfate concentrations. Results indicated that the presence of sulfate could depress nitrobenzene reduction. Such depression is linked to the inhibition of nitroreductase activity and/or the shift of electron flow. In the acetate series, although sulfate did not strongly compete with nitrobenzene for electron donors, noncompetitive inhibition of specific nitrobenzene reduction rates by sulfate was observed, with an inhibition constant of 0.40 mM. Propionate, which can produce intermediate H-2 as preferred reducing equivalent, is a more effective primary electron donor for nitrobenzene reduction as compared to acetate. In the propionate series, sulfate was found to be a preferential electron acceptor as compared to nitrobenzene, resulting in a quick depletion of propionate and then a likely termination of H-2-releasing under higher sulfate concentrations (R9 and R10). In such a situation, nitrobenzene reduction slowed down, occurring two-stage zero-order kinetics. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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