We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Response of aerobic granular sludge under polyethylene microplastics stress: Physicochemical properties, decontamination performance, and microbial community
Summary
Researchers investigated the impact of polyethylene microplastics on aerobic granular sludge used in wastewater treatment. The study found that microplastics significantly disrupted sludge structure, settling properties, and enzyme activities related to denitrification and phosphorus removal, with increased reactive oxygen species and cell membrane damage at higher concentrations.
Microplastics are widely detected in sewage and sludge in wastewater treatment plants and can thereby influence biological processes. In this study, the overall impacts of polyethylene microplastics (PE MPs) and their toxicity mechanisms on aerobic granular sludge (AGS) were investigated. Particle structure, settling properties, particle size distribution, and extracellular polymeric substance characteristics of AGS were significantly affected by PE MPs with concentrations of 20 and 200 n/L. Increased relative contents of reactive oxygen species (ROS) (146.34% and 191.43%) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) (185.71% and 316.67%) under PE MPs (20 and 200 n/L) exposure resulted in disruption of cellular structure. The activities of enzymes related to denitrification and phosphorus removal were greatly decreased, while ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) was stable, supporting the high efficiency removal of ammonia nitrogen. High-throughput sequencing demonstrated that the relative abundance of nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria (Nitrospira, Thermomonas, Flavobacterium), and PAOs (Comamonas and Rhodocyclus) were significantly reduced from 4.47%, 3.57%, 2.02%, 9.38%, and 5.45%-2.95%, 2.88%, 1.77%, 8.01%, and 4.86% as the concentration of PE MPs increased from 0 to 200 n/L, respectively. Those findings were consistent with the deterioration in decontamination capability.
Sign in to start a discussion.