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Exposure of polyethylene microplastics affects sulfur migration and transformation in anaerobic system

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yunhao Xu, Qizi Fu, Dandan He, Fan Yang, Xingyu Ma, Yan Wang, Zirui Liu, Xuran Liu, Dongbo Wang

Summary

This study found that polyethylene microplastics in anaerobic wastewater treatment systems increased the production of hydrogen sulfide, a corrosive and toxic gas, by 15-27%. The microplastics promoted the activity of sulfur-processing bacteria and altered the sulfur cycle within the treatment system. This is relevant because it shows microplastics can disrupt the wastewater treatment processes that protect water quality for downstream communities.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Polyethylene (PE) microplastic, which is detected in various environmental media worldwide, also inevitably enters wastewater treatment plants, which may have an impact on anaerobic processes in wastewater treatment. In this work, the effect of PE microplastics on anaerobic sulfur transformation was explored. Experimental results showed that PE microplastics addition at 0.1%- 0.5% w/w promoted HS production by 14.8%-27.4%. PE microplastics enhanced the release of soluble organic sulfur and inorganic sulfate, and promoted the bioprocesses of organosulfur compounds hydrolysis and sulfate reduction. Mechanism analysis showed that PE microplastics increased the content of electroactive components (e.g., protein and humic acids) contained in extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). In particular, PE microplastics increased the proportion and the dipole moment of α-helix, an important component involved in electron transfer contained in extracelluar protein, which provided more electron transfer sites and promoted the α-helix mediated electron transfer. These enhanced the direct electron transfer ability of EPSs, which might explain why PE microplastics facilitated the bioprocesses of organosulfur compounds hydrolysis and sulfate reduction. Correspondingly, metagenomic analysis revealed that PE microplastics increased the relative abundance of S producers (e.g., Desulfobacula and Desulfonema) and the relative abundance of functional genes involved in anaerobic sulfur transformation (e.g., PepD and cysD), which were beneficial to HS production in anaerobic system.

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