4.8 Article

Hierarchical Bi2O2CO3 wrapped with modified graphene oxide for adsorption-enhanced photocatalytic inactivation of antibiotic resistant bacteria and resistance genes

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2020.116157

Keywords

Trap-and-zap; Nitrogen-doped graphene; Surface reactive species; Antibiotic resistance

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51625804]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFD1100500]
  3. NSF ERC on Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment [EEC-1449500]
  4. NSF PIRE grant [OISE1545756]

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There is growing pressure for wastewater treatment plants to mitigate the discharge of antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and extracellular resistance genes (eARGs), which requires technological innovation. Here, hierarchical Bi2O2CO3 microspheres were wrapped with nitrogen-doped, reduced graphene oxide (NRGO) for enhanced inactivation of multidrug-resistant E. coli NDM-1 and degradation of the plasmid-encoded ARG (blaNDM-1) in secondary effluent. The NRGO shell enhanced reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation (center dot OH and H2O2) by about three-fold, which was ascribed to broadened light absorption region (red-shifted up to 459 nm) and decreased electron-transfer time (from 55.3 to 19.8 ns). Wrapping enhanced E. coli adsorption near photocatalytic sites to minimize ROS scavenging by background constituents, which contributed to the NRGO-wrapped microspheres significantly outperforming commercial TiO2 photocatalyst. ROS scavenger tests indicated that wrapping also changed the primary inactivation pathway, with photogenerated electron holes and surface-attached hydroxyl radicals becoming the predominant oxidizing species with wrapped microspheres, versus free ROS (e.g., center dot OH, H2O2 and center dot O-2(-)) for bare microspheres. Formation of resistance plasmid-composited microsphere complexes, primary due to the pi-pi stacking and hydrogen bonding between the shell and nucleotides, also minimized ROS scavenging and kept free plasmid concentrations below 10(2) copies/mL. As proof-of concept, this work offers promising insight into the utilization of NRGO-wrapped microspheres for mitigating antibiotic resistance propagation in the environment. (c) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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