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Inhibitory effect of microplastics derived organic matters on humification reaction of organics in sewage sludge under alkali-hydrothermal treatment
Summary
This study investigated how microplastics in sewage sludge affect the formation of humic acids during alkali-hydrothermal treatment, a common method for recovering valuable organic matter. Researchers found that organic compounds leached from microplastics inhibited the humification process, suggesting that microplastic contamination can reduce the quality of recovered materials from wastewater sludge.
Alkali-hydrothermal treatment (AHT) of sewage sludge is often used to recover value-added dissolved organic matters (DOM) enriched with artificial humic acids (HA). Microplastics (MPs), as emerging contaminants in sewage sludge, can leach organic compounds (MP-DOM) during AHT, which potentially impact the characteristics of thermally treated sludge's DOM. This study employed spectroscopy and Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS) to explore the impacts of MPs on DOM composition and transformation during AHT. The biological effects of DOM were also investigated by hydroponic experiments. The results showed that the leaching of MP-DOM led to a substantial increase in DOC content of DOM of thermally treated sludge. Conversely, the HA content significantly decreased in the presence of MPs, resulting in a decline of plant growth facilitation degree. FT-ICR-MS analysis revealed that the reduction in HA content was characterized by a notable decline in the abundance of O and NO molecules. Reactomics results indicated that the leaching of MP-DOM inhibited the Maillard reaction but bolstered oxidation reactions. The inhibition of Maillard reaction, resulting in a decrease in crucial precursors (dicarbonyl compounds, ketoses, and deoxyglucosone), was responsible for the decrease of HA content. The primary mechanism responsible for inhibiting the Maillard reaction was the consumption of reactive amino reactants through two pathways. Firstly, the leaching of organic acids in MP-DOM caused decrease of sludge pH, leading to the protonation of amino groups. Secondly, the lipid-like compounds in MP-DOM underwent oxidation (-2H+O), producing fatty aldehydes that consumed the reactive amino reactants. These discoveries offer enhanced insights into the specific contribution of MPs to the composition, transformation, bioactivity of DOM during AHT process.
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