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Electrochemical and microbiological response of exoelectrogenic biofilm to polyethylene microplastics in water

Water Research 2022 97 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Song Wang, Mingyi Xu, Biao Jin, Biao Jin, Biao Jin, Biao Jin, Yifeng Zhang Yanyan Su, Yifeng Zhang Yanyan Su, Yanyan Su, Urban J. Wünsch, Yifeng Zhang Yanyan Su, Song Wang, Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Biao Jin, Yanyan Su, Yanyan Su, Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang Yifeng Zhang

Summary

Researchers found that polyethylene microplastics impaired exoelectrogenic biofilms used in microbial electrochemical water treatment by reducing electroactive bacteria abundance, suppressing electron transfer genes, and increasing system resistance.

Polymers

Exoelectrogenic biofilm and the associated microbial electrochemical processes have recently been intensively studied for water treatment, but their response to and interaction with polyethylene (PE) microplastics which are widespread in various aquatic environments has never been reported. Here, we investigated how and to what extent PE microplastics would affect the electrochemistry and microbiology of exoelectrogenic biofilm in both microbial fuel cells (MFCs) and microbial electrolysis cells (MECs). When the PE microplastics concentration was increased from 0 to 75 mg/L in the MECs, an apparent decline in the maximum current density (from 1.99 to 0.74 A/m<sup>2</sup>) and abundance of electroactive bacteria (EAB) in the exoelectrogenic biofilm was noticed. While in the MFCs, the current output was not significantly influenced and the abundance of EAB lightly increased at 25 mg/L microplastics. In addition, PE microplastics restrained the viability of the exoelectrogenic biofilms in both systems, leading to a higher system electrode resistance. Moreover, the microbial community richness and the microplastics-related operational taxonomic units decreased with PE microplastics. Furthermore, the electron transfer-related genes (e.g., pilA and mtrC) and cytochrome c concentration decreased after adding microplastics. This study provides the first glimpse into the influence of PE microplastics on the exoelectrogenic biofilm with the potential mechanisms revealed at the gene level, laying a methodological foundation for the future development of efficient water treatment technologies.

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