4.8 Article

Mechanism insights into liquid polarity regulation for enhanced dewatering of waste-activated sludge: Specifically focusing on the solid-liquid affinity reduction depending on phase-transfer and conformational features of amphiphilic protein

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 221, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118793

Keywords

Waste-activated sludge; Dewatering; Liquid polarity; Interfacial free energy; Protein conformation

Funding

  1. Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [21YF1449100, 21230714500]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, People's Republic of China [2020YFC1908603-03]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52100159, 51978495]
  4. Tongji University [22120210533, 2022-4-YB-11]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study proposed a process for enhancing sludge dewatering through regulating liquid polarity. The decrease of liquid dielectric constant below 50 was found to significantly improve solid-liquid separation performance. The recovery of liquid amendment (acetonitrile) from filtered sludge cake was achieved at a lower energy consumption compared to water evaporation by sludge drying. The addition of NaCl with saturated concentration could non-thermally recover acetonitrile amendment from the filtrate. Moreover, the mechanism of liquid polarity regulation for enhanced dewatering was investigated, revealing the reduction of solid-liquid interfacial free energy and the phase-transfer of amphiphilic proteins.
This study proposed that decreasing liquid polarity could weaken the intermolecular polar force at solid-liquid interface of waste-activated sludge (WAS). Accordingly, a process for enhanced sludge dewatering through liquid polarity regulation was established. The liquid polarity was quantified by dielectric constant and the decrease of liquid dielectric constant below 50 was found to significantly improve the solid-liquid separation performance of WAS in terms of filterability by > 70%. The differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) coupled with mass spectrum (MS) identified that 60 C was the appropriate temperature for liquid amendment (i.e., acetonitrile) recovery from filtered sludge cake, and the corresponding energy consumption was calculated to be at most 799.0 J/g, which was substantially lower than that of water evaporation by sludge drying. The NaCl addition with 75% of saturated concentration could non-thermally recover 91.7 +/- 4.9% of acetonitrile amendment from filtrate by salting-out. The great potentials in energy saving and recycle of chemicals make the newly proposed approach act as alternatives for the conventional process (i.e., mechanically dewatering + drying). Regarding the mechanism of liquid polarity regulation for enhanced WAS dewatering, the solid-liquid interfacial free energy was found to be reduced by 39.4% with the liquid dielectric constant decreasing from 78.50 to 41.00. Also, Tandem Mass Tags (TMT) proteomics tracked the phase-transfer of amphiphilic proteins with decreasing liquid polarity, which found that the solubilization of proteins involved in the Gene Ontology (GO) classifications of membrane protein complex and membrane protein complex/outer membrane could facilitate the enhanced solid-liquid separation of WAS. The conformational analysis on those differential proteins was further conducted to reveal the structure attributes of amphiphilic proteins for the phase-transfer feature. The proteins with more exposed amino acid residues (i.e., average solvent accessibility index over 1.8) tended to dissolve in the liquid phase with lower polarity, which was accompanied with the reduced interfacial free energy of WAS. On the contrary, the proteins with buried amino acid residues (e.g., the central hydrophobic beta-sheet is surrounded by the hydrophilic alpha-helix) precipitated in the solid phase with the decreasing liquid polarity. All these findings are expected to create a novel option for dewatering WAS with recyclable liquid conditioning agents, and provide the improved mechanistic insights into the migration of interfacial compositions controlling the dewaterability of WAS.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available