4.7 Article

Inhibition and removal of trichloroacetaldehyde by biological acidification with glucose co-metabolism

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 386, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2019.121796

Keywords

Trichloroacetaldehyde; Biological acidification; Volatile fatty acids; Acidifying enzymes; Extracellular polymeric substances

Funding

  1. National Water Pollution Control and Treatment Science and Technology Major Project of China [20177X07402002]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51508538]
  3. Major Science and Technology Program for Water Pollution Control and Treatment of China [2017ZX07103-003]

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Biological acidification plays a crucial role in biological removal of organic compounds during petrochemical wastewater treatment. Trichloroacetaldehyde is a typical organic pollutant in petrochemical wastewater, however, no studies have been conducted on its effect on biological acidification. In this study, batch bioassays of volatile fatty acids were conducted to explore the inhibitory effect of trichloroacetaldehyde on biological acidification, the variations of key enzymes and extracellular polymeric substances under trichloroacetaldehyde shock, and the mechanism of trichloroacetaldehyde removal. The results of these bioassays indicated that trichloroacetaldehyde inhibited the acid yield at higher concentrations (EC50 112.20 mg/L), and butyric fermentation was predominant. Moreover, the contents of extracellular polymeric substances and several key acidifying enzymes greatly decreased when the trichloroacetaldehyde concentration exceeded 100 mg/L, which was due to the toxicity that trichloroacetaldehyde poses to the microbes involved in biological acidification. The trichloroacetaldehyde mechanism was as follows: first, trichloroacetaldehyde was adsorbed by extracellular polymeric substances and anaerobic granular sludge, and then transformed into trichloroethanol, trichloroethane, dichloroacetaldehyde, and dichloroethanol under the combined action of the aldehyde reductase and reductive dehalogenases secreted from the microbial consortium. The ability of biological acidification to remove trichloroacetaldehyde was limited; therefore, trichloroacetaldehyde should be pretreated before it enters biological treatment systems.

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