Journal Pre-proof Rapid and strong biocidal effect of ferrate on sulfidogenic and methanogenic sewer biofilms Xiaofang Yan, Jing Sun, Ahezhuoli Kenjiahan, Xiaohu Dai, Bing-Jie Ni, Zhiguo Yuan PII:
S0043-1354(19)30982-0
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.115208
Reference:
WR 115208
To appear in:
Water Research
Received Date: 29 March 2019 Revised Date:
22 September 2019
Accepted Date: 15 October 2019
Please cite this article as: Yan, X., Sun, J., Kenjiahan, A., Dai, X., Ni, B.-J., Yuan, Z., Rapid and strong biocidal effect of ferrate on sulfidogenic and methanogenic sewer biofilms, Water Research (2019), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.115208. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Graphical Abstract
1
Rapid and Strong Biocidal Effect of Ferrate on Sulfidogenic and
2
Methanogenic Sewer Biofilms
3 4
Xiaofang Yan1, Jing Sun1,2,*, Ahezhuoli Kenjiahan1, Xiaohu Dai1,2,, Bing-Jie Ni1,2,*,
5
Zhiguo Yuan3
6 7
1. State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, College of
8
Environmental Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, P.R.
9
China
10
2. Shanghai Institute of Pollution Control and Ecological Security, Shanghai200092,
11
P.R. China
12
3. Advanced Water Management Centre (AWMC), The University of Queensland, St.
13
Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia
14 15
*Corresponding Authors:
16
Jing Sun, Phone: +86 21 65986849; E-mail:
[email protected]
17
Bing-Jie Ni, Phone: +86 21 65986849; E-mail:
[email protected]
18
1
19
Abstract
20
For the control of sulfide and methane in sewers, it is favorable to reduce their
21
production rather than to remove them after generation. In this study, we revealed
22
rapid and strong biocidal effect of ferrate (Fe(VI)) on sulfidogenic and methanogenic
23
sewer biofilms, leading to control of sulfide and methane production in sewer. The
24
inactivation of the microorganisms in sewer biofilms by Fe(VI) could be
25
accomplished within 15 min for a single dosing event and the biocidal effect could be
26
enhanced by applying pulse dosing strategy. The microbiological analysis showed that
27
the key functional genes involved in sulfide and methane production, i.e. dsrA and
28
mcrA, in the viable cells after Fe(VI) dosing were decreased substantially by 84.2%
29
and 86.6%, respectively. Significant drops were also observed in the relative
30
abundances of viable sulfide reducing bacteria (SRB) and methanogenic archaea
31
(MA). The direct dosing of Fe(VI) into a sewer reactor led to instant and complete
32
suppression of sulfidogenic and methanogenic activities, and the recovery of the
33
activities resembled the regrowth of residual SRB and MA. The results of this study
34
suggested the feasibility for developing an efficient and cost-effective sulfide and
35
methane control strategy using Fe(VI).
36 37
Keywords: Sewer biofilm; Ferrate; Biocidal effect; Sulfate-reducing bacteria;
38
Methanogenic archaea;
39
2
40
1.Introduction
41
Sulfide-induced sewer corrosion and odor have long been considered as major
42
problems in sewer management. The rehabilitation or replacement of corroded sewer
43
pipes always brings heavy financial burdens on water industries and local
44
governments (Pikaar et al. 2014). Meanwhile the malodor caused by sulfide emission
45
can arouse plenty of complaints from the neighborhoods (Jiang et al. 2017, Sun et al.
46
2015b). In addition, high concentration of hydrogen sulfide in sewers may pose health
47
risks to related workers due to its toxicity. A common practice to control sulfide in
48
sewers to date is the dose of chemicals (Jiang et al. 2015a). For example, oxidants
49
such as oxygen/air, nitrate and hydrogen peroxide are usually added into sewers to
50
oxidize sulfide. Metal salts, mainly including ferrous chloride and ferric chloride, are
51
also frequently applied to precipitate sulfide in sewers. Elevation of pH by dosing
52
alkali is another commonly used method to reduce sulfide emission from sewer.
53
However, most of the chemical dosing strategies for sulfide control in sewers involve
54
constant chemical addition to remove sulfide already formed, and therefore resulting
55
in high operational cost due to large chemical consumptions (Ganigue et al. 2011).
56 57
Methane emission from sewers has also been recognized as a potential environmental
58
issue since the last decade. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas with around 21 times
59
global warming potential of carbon dioxide (IPCC 2006). Its emission from sewers
60
could contribute considerably to the overall greenhouse gas emissions from
61
wastewater systems (Guisasola et al. 2008, Liu et al. 2015). Even worse, the release of
62
methane from sewers can pose serious safety risks because of its relatively low
63
explosion limit (lower explosive level is approximately 5%) (Spencer et al. 2006).
64
Moreover, the loss of soluble COD due to methanogenic activity may cause adverse
3
65
effect on biological nutrient removal at the downstream wastewater treatment plants
66
(WWTPs) (Guisasola et al. 2008, Sun et al. 2015a). Therefore, the control of methane
67
emission should also be included in the sewer management.
68 69
To control the sulfide and methane in sewer systems effectively and economically, it
70
is favorable to reduce sulfide and methane production rather than to remove them
71
after their production. In fact, the production of sulfide and methane in sewer is
72
mainly caused by the metabolism of microorganisms in biofilms attached on the
73
sewer pipe walls. Specifically, under the anaerobic conditions, sulfate-reducing
74
bacteria (SRB) in sewer biofilms use various kinds of organic matters and hydrogen
75
as electron donors and sulfate as electron acceptor to produce sulfide (Li et al. 2018).
76
Besides, methane can be generated through the anaerobic respiration of methanogenic
77
archaea (MA), using hydrogen and acetate as common substrates (Sun et al. 2014).
78
Therefore, suppressing the metabolic activities of microorganisms in sewer biofilms,
79
especially these of SRB and MA, is of vital importance for establishing cost-effective
80
sulfide and methane control strategies in sewers.
81 82
To this end, antimicrobial agents, including metabolic inhibitors and broad-spectrum
83
biocides have been under investigation. Chueng and Beech (1996) studied the effect
84
of three different biocides, i.e. formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde and isothiozolone on
85
sessile SRB. They found that activities of SRB biofilm were decreased by 74%-100%
86
after exposure to these three compounds at 400 mg/L for 24 hours. Similarly, Gardner
87
and Stewart (2002) reported that a dose of glutaraldehyde at 500 mg/L for 7 h could
88
completely suppress the sulfide production by a mixed-culture biofilm. Molybdate, a
89
metabolic inhibitor for SRB, has also been used to control sulfide production in swine
4
90
manure, municipal solid wastes and anaerobic digesters (Isa and Anderson 2005,
91
Zahedi et al. 2014). Nevertheless, the application of these chemicals in sewer systems
92
could have adverse impact on the downstream WWTPs and receiving water due to
93
their generic toxicity and low biodegradability. Recent studies revealed that free
94
nitrous acid (FNA) was able to decrease the number of viable microorganisms in
95
sewer biofilms substantially, thus suppressing the sulfide and methane production
96
(Jiang et al. 2011). However, to ensure a satisfactory biocidal effect of FNA, a long
97
exposure time (6-24 hours) was often required. It is therefore desirable to develop a
98
new chemical dosing strategy to inactivate sewer biofilm in a more rapid and safe
99
way.
100 101
Ferrate (Fe(VI)), a high-valent tetraoxy iron, has recently come to the forefront as a
102
multifunctional water-treatment chemical (Chen et al. 2018a, Chen et al. 2018b).
103
Fe(VI) could be used as oxidant and disinfectant in water and wastewater treatment,
104
leaving nontoxic Fe(III) oxides/hydroxides after its application, which initiates the
105
process of coagulation (Sharma et al. 2015). In particular, Fe(VI) can effectively kill
106
various bacteria and viruses, such as Escherichia coli, Sphaerotilus, Bacillus,
107
Salmonella and bacteriophage MS2 (Cho et al. 2006, Jiang et al. 2007, Sharma 2007) .
108
It has been observed that Fe(VI) could achieve 99.9% kill rates of total coliforms at
109
the dosage of 0.5-12.5 ppm in water sources collected worldwide (Sharma 2007). In
110
addition, a pioneering study on biofilm showed that a ferrate(VI) concentration of 10-5
111
M can effectively prevent biofilm growth on a condenser with only 5-min contact
112
time every 12 hours (Fagan and Waite 1983). The strong disinfection effect of Fe(VI)
113
suggested the possibility of its use to control the metabolic activities of
114
microorganisms in sewer biofilms within short contact time. Also, as the use of Fe(VI)
5
115
does not produce any mutagenic/carcinogenic by-products (Sharma et al. 2015), its
116
application in sewer system could avoid adverse impact on water environment.
117
Therefore, an in-depth understanding of the biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the
118
microorganisms situated in sewer biofilms would have great practical significance for
119
sulfide and methane control in sewer management.
120 121
The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of Fe(VI) on sulfidogenic and
122
methanogenic sewer biofilms. The effects of Fe(VI) concentrations, exposure time,
123
dosing modes and pH on the viability of microorganisms in the biofilm were
124
evaluated. The differences in abundances of functional genes of viable cells related to
125
sulfide and methane production and microbial community in the biofilm with and
126
without Fe(VI) treatment were also explored by means of propidum monoazide
127
treatment combined with real-time polymerase chain reactions (PMA-qPCR) and
128
high-throughput sequencing, respectively. In addition, direct dosing of Fe(VI) into the
129
sewer reactor was conducted for assessing its effects on sulfide and methane
130
production activities. The results of this study are expected to lay a fundamental basis
131
for developing efficient and cost-effective sulfide and methane control strategies by
132
applying Fe(VI).
133 134
2. Materials and methods
135
2.1 Sewer reactor setup and operation
136
lab-scale sewer reactors, namely R1, R2 and R3, made of PerspexTM, were set up in
137
parallel to develop sulfidogenic and methanogenic sewer biofilms under anaerobic
138
conditions (Figure S1, Supplementary Information). The reactor has a diameter of 80
139
mm and a height of 200 mm, resulting in an effective volume of 1 L. A small reservoir 6
140
is connected to the top of the reactor to ensure air tightness. Three strings of plastic
141
carriers of approximately 1 cm in diameter were mounted in the reactors to provide
142
additional surface for biofilm growth and to allow the sampling of intact biofilms. The
143
total biofilm area in each reactor, including the inner wall, inner surface of the lid and
144
the carriers, was approximately 0.1 m2, resulting in the area to 100 m2/m3.
145 146
The reactors were fed with real wastewater collected every three days from a wet well
147
in Shanghai, China. The sewage typically contained sulfide at concentration of 1-2
148
mg-S/L, sulfate at concentration between 50-60 mg-S/L, and volatile fatty acid (VFA)
149
at 50-100 mg-COD/L. After the collection, the wastewater was stored immediately in
150
a freezer at 4 oC to minimize the change of water composition. It was then heated up
151
to 20 oC and fed to the reactors through a peristaltic pump every 6 h. During each
152
pumping event, 1 L of wastewater was transferred into the reactor over two minutes.
153
The wastewater in the reactor was mixed with a magnetic stirrer (200 rpm) to produce
154
a moderate shear force and avoid solids settling at the bottom.
155 156
Batch tests were conducted every two weeks to measure the sulfide and methane
157
production activities of each reactor. At the start of the tests, fresh wastewater was
158
pumping into reactors for 6 min to ensure a thorough replacement of liquid in the
159
reactors. Wastewater was sampled at 0, 20, 40, 60 min after the pumping events to
160
analyze sulfide, sulfate and dissolved methane concentrations using method described
161
in Section 2.7. Sulfide and methane production rates (SPR and MPR) were calculated
162
using linear regression of sulfide and methane concentrations. The following
163
experiments were commenced when all three reactors reached the pseudo-steady state,
164
as suggested by the relatively stable SPR and MPR.
7
165 166
2.2 Viability tests on the biocidal effect of Fe(VI)
167
Three sets of viability tests (i.e. Experiment I-III) were carried out to investigate the
168
biocidal effects of Fe(VI) on the sulfidogenic and methogenic sewer biofilms. The
169
Fe(VI) concentration, exposure time, initial pH and dosing mode applied in each test
170
were listed in Table 1. In Experiment I, the effect of Fe(VI) concentration and
171
exposure time on cell viability in biofilms were evaluated. The Fe(VI) concentrations
172
applied on the biofilms varied from 0 to 200 mg-Fe/L and the exposure time ranged
173
from 15 to 60 min, while the initial pH of the wastewater remained unadjusted at ~7.5.
174
The Experiment II explored the effect of pH on the biocidal effect of Fe(VI). In the
175
test, the Fe(VI) concentration was kept at 120 mg-Fe/L, while the initial pH of the
176
wastewater varied from 5-9. The exposure time was kept at 60 min. Experiment III
177
was designed to assess that if pulse dosing mode could enhance the biocial effect of
178
Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm. In this study, a high-concentration dosing event was spilt
179
into three low-concentration dosing events, with the concentration and exposure
180
duration for each event listed in Table 1.
181 182
The tests were carried in the 50 mL tubes filled with filtered (0.22 µm) wastewater.
183
The pH of wastewater was adjusted by HCl (1 M) when necessary according to the
184
experimental design (Table 1). A plastic carrier with attached biofilm was transferred
185
from the biofilm reactor R1 into each tube. Different volume of stock solution of
186
K2FeO4 (1 g-Fe/L) was added to each tube to achieve the designed Fe(VI)
187
concentrations according to Table 1. Then the tubes were capped to avoid contacting
188
of air and gently mixed by an orbital shaker at 60 rpm. After a certain duration of
189
incubation used in each set of tests as described in Table 1, the biofilm on the carriers 8
190
were sampled for LIVE/DEAD staining, using the method illustrated in Section 2.4.
191
Also, PMA-qPCR and Illumina Miseq sequencing were performed to evaluate the
192
effect of Fe (VI) on the functional genes for sulfide and methane production as well as
193
microbial community in the sewer biofilm, with the method to be further described.
194 195
2.3 Direct Fe(VI) dosing to sewer biofilm reactors
196
Fe(VI) was directly added to the lab-scale sewer reactor R2 and the loss of sulfide and
197
methane production activities was monitored after Fe(VI) dosing during subsequent
198
recovery period. The Fe(VI) dosing strategy in the reactor (Fe concentration and
199
exposure time, dosing mode) was deterimined based on the above vialibility tests
200
results. Specifically, K2FeO4 was immidiately dosed into the reactor after a pumping
201
event to reach a Fe(VI) concentration of 60 mg-Fe/L. The dosing event was repeated
202
for another two times in every 15 min, resulted in a total Fe(VI) dosage of 180
203
mg-Fe/L. The batch tests for determining SPR and MPR in the reactor as described in
204
Section 2.1 were conducted immediately after the Fe(VI) treatment and in the next 60
205
days with intervals of two days to two weeks. The SPR and MPR of R3 (without
206
Fe(VI) dosing) were also monitored during the same period, serving as a control. In
207
addition, the volatile suspended solids (VSS) in the influent and effluent of the
208
reactors were also monitored to assess the effect of Fe(VI) dosing on integrity of the
209
biofilm structure.
210 211
2.4 LIVE/DEAD staining
212
The viability of bacterial cells in biofilms was determined using the LIVE/DEAD®
213
Baclight™ bacterial viability kits (Molecular Probes, L-7012). The viability kit
214
involves two nucleic acid stains, namely green-fluorescent SYTO-9 and 9
215
red-fluorescent Propidium Iodide (PI). The SYTO-9 could label all cells while PI
216
could only penetrate cells with damaged membrane and resulted in a reduction in the
217
the SYTO-9 stain fluorescence. As a result, the viable cells are stained green, whereas
218
the dead cells are stained red.
219 220
Before the staining process, the plastic carriers were transferred to filtered (0.22 µm)
221
wastewater and the biofilms were detached through vigorous vortex mixing
222
(VORTEX-5, Kylin-bell®). The staining of cells was conducted based on protocols
223
provided by the manufacturer. Basically, 3 µl mixture of SYTO-9 and PI (volume
224
ratio 1:1) was added into 200 µl of biofilm suspension and mixed thoroughly. The
225
sample was incubated at room temperature in the dark for 15 min. Then 5 µl of the
226
stained biofilm suspension was transferred to a microscope slide and photographed
227
using a fluorescence microscope (Eclipse 80i, Nikon Corp.,Japan) with a halogen
228
lamp (30W, 6V) (Boulos et al. 1999, Hu et al. 2017). Twenty images of randomly
229
chosen areas of the stained biofilm samples were taken for quatification. The ratio of
230
live and dead microorganisms was deterimined by the relative abundance of green and
231
red pixels via the image analysis software, DAIME (version 1.3).
232 233
2.5 PMA-qPCR
234
PMA-qPCR analysis was conducted to evaluate the effect of Fe(VI) on the abundance
235
of functional genes involved in sulfide and methane production in the viable
236
microorganisms in sewer biofilms. PMA can selectively enter dead cells and inhibit
237
the DNA amplification during subsequent qPCR. As a result, only abundacne of genes
238
in living cells will be quantified. The biofilm treated by pulse dosing of Fe(VI) at 60
239
mg-Fe/L for three times as described in Section 2.2 and the biofilms without Fe(VI) 10
240
treatment were examined for this purpose. The abundances of key genes in SRB and
241
MA , i.e. dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrA) and methyl-coenzyme M reductase
242
(mcrA) genes were tested. In addition, the 16S rRNA genes of total bacteria and total
243
archaea in living cells were also quantified and compared. The primers used for each
244
targeting gene were listed in Table S1, SI.
245 246
The PMA-qPCR analysis was carried out in the following steps. Firstly, the biofilms
247
were detached from the carries in PBS using the method described in Section 2.4.
248
Subsequently, the samples were centrifuged and resuspended in PBS to allow the VSS
249
concentrations of biofilm suspensions in the recommened range for PMA
250
cross-linking (Tian et al. 2017). The PMA treatment of the samples was then carried
251
out based on protocal described by Taskin et al. (2011) and the details of the protocal
252
were illustrated in SI. Afterwards, DNA extractions were conducted using
253
TIANNAMP Soil DNA Kit (Tiangen, Beijing, China) according to the manufacturer’s
254
instruction. The qPCR was then performed using the StepOnePlus™ real-time PCR
255
dectection system, with the reaction condition further described in SI. Each PCR
256
reaction was run in triplicate for quality assurance and statistical analysis purposes.
257 258
2.6 High-throughput sequencing analysis
259
The high-throughput sequencing was conducted on the same biofilm sample used for
260
PMA-qPCR analysis to explore the effect of Fe(VI) dosing on the viable microbial
261
community struture of sewer biofilm. The samples were firstly undergone with PMA
262
treatment to ensure only viable cells were analyzed. Then, DNA was extracted and a
263
pair of universal primes 515FmodF (5'-GTGYCAGCMGCCGCGGTAA-3') and
264
806RmodR (5'-GGACTACNVGGGTWTCTAAT-3') designed to target the variable 11
265
regions V4-V5 of the microbial 16S rRNA gene was applied for PCR amplification
266
(Walters et al. 2016). The sequencing was performed at Majorbio Bio-pharm
267
Technology Co., Ltd, Shanghai, China on Illumina HiSeq2500 platform. Date analysis
268
was implemented on the online i-sanger sever (http://www.i-sanger.com) of Majorbio
269
Bio-pharmTechnology Co., Ltd. Detailed procedures of the analysis were described in
270
SI. The raw reads were deposited into the NCBI Sequence Read Archive (SRA)
271
database (Accession Number: SRP186539).
272 273
2.7 Chemcial analysis
274
The sulfate concentration was measured by an ion chromatograph with a conductivity
275
dector (DIONEX ICS 1000) and the sulfide concentration was determined by the
276
methylene blue method (Sharma et al. 1997). The wastewater samples were firstly
277
filtered (0.22 µm membrane) before sulfate and sulfide measurement. Dissolved
278
methane concentration in wastewater was analyzed using gas chromatograpy
279
equipped with flame ionization detector (GC-FID) (Shimadzu GC 2010 plus) based
280
on the method previously reported by Sturm et al. (2015). The detection limit of the
281
method is 0.4 µg/L and the recovery ratio is 93%. VFA concentration was measured
282
using gas chromatography (Shimadzu GC 2010 plus) and the VSS of the wastewater
283
were measured according to standard methods (APHA 1998).
284 285
3. Results and discussion
286
3.1 Rapid biocidal effect of ferrate on the sewer biofilm
287
The effects of Fe(VI) concentration and exposure time on the microorganisms’
288
viability in sewer biofilms were illustrated in Figure 1. The results showed that the
12
289
viable cells in biofilms dropped significantly from ~82% to ~35% with the increase of
290
Fe(VI) concentration from 0 to 120 mg-Fe/L at all tested Fe(VI) exposure time.
291
Whereas, a further increase of Fe(VI) dosage to 200 mg-Fe/L did not decrease the
292
viability of microorganisms in biofilms anymore. More importantly, the results
293
showed no significant difference (P>0.05) in the percentage of viable cells in the
294
biofilms with the exposure time decreased from 60 min to 15 min at all tested Fe(VI)
295
dosing rates (Figure 1A). This indicated that Fe(VI) could achieve substantial
296
inactivation rate of microorganisms in sewer biofilms with relatively high efficiency,
297
i.e. within 15 min. The dependency of the percentage of viable microorganisms in the
298
biofilm on the ferrate concentration under different exposure times could be
299
satisfactorily described using the exponential decay model y =
300
shown in Figure 1(B). The estimated parameters with the standard errors were listed
301
in Table S2, SI. The high correlation between experimentally measured results and
302
model predicts (R2>0.95) in all three cases further confirmed that there was no
303
significant difference in microorganism viabilities under different Fe(VI) exposure
304
times.
+
as
305 306
The biocidal effect of Fe(VI) is believed to mainly rely on its oxidation capacity. The
307
redox potential of Fe(VI) (E0=2.20 V) is the highest among the chemicals used for
308
water and wastewater treatment (Jiang 2014). The strong oxidation capacity of Fe(VI)
309
enables it to pose damaging effect on cell wall, protoplasm, genome and other vital
310
microorganism organs, thus leading to the instantaneous death of the microorganisms
311
(Talaiekhozani et al. 2017). In addition, reactive oxygen species of O2 - and H2O2
312
could also be produced during the decomposition of Fe(VI), which could also
313
contribute to the rapid biocidal effect of Fe(VI) (Hu et al. 2012). The high inactivation
13
314
efficiency of Fe(VI) on microorganisms revealed in this study was in accordance with
315
those observed by other researchers. For example, Jiang et al. (2007) found that a
316
Fe(VI) dosage of 8 mg/L can achieve 90% -100% inactivation efficiency on E. coli in
317
model water samples, with exposure times between 5-30 min. Also, it has been
318
reported that exposure time required to obtain 2-log10 inactivation of bacteriophages
319
f2 and Qβ was only ~5 min (Hu et al. 2012). It is worthwhile to note that the
320
minimum exposure time used in this study was 15 min. It is also likely that the
321
exposure time less than 15 min could also achieve the same biocidal effect on the
322
sewer biofilms, which required further investigation.
323 324
In this study, the minimal Fe(VI) dosing amount (through a single dosing event) to
325
achieving lowest viability of microorganisms in sewer biofilms was 120 mg-Fe/L,
326
which was much high than that required for drinking water and wastewater
327
disinfection (~10-50 mg-Fe/L) (Jiang et al. 2006, Talaiekhozani et al. 2017). One
328
possible reason is that the abundance of microorganisms in the sewer biofilm was
329
much higher than that in drinking water or treated wastewater. It may also attribute to
330
the penetration limitation caused by the biofilm matrix (Sun et al. 2014). The
331
microorganisms in drinking water or freshwater were mostly in suspension, so that
332
Fe(VI) can easily get access to them. However, the microorganisms in sewer biofilms
333
were aggregated within a slimy extracellular matrix, which could hamper the
334
chemical penetration. Therefore, a higher dosing rate is required for Fe(VI) to reach
335
the microorganisms located in the inner layer of the biofilms. Moreover, the reactions
336
between Fe(VI) and organic matters in the wastewater are also likely to weaken the
337
biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on sewer biofilm (Deng et al. 2018, Fan et al. 2018). Notably,
338
a further increase of Fe (VI) dosing rate to 200 mg/L did not significantly reduce the
14
339
microbial viability in sewer biofilms. This is possibly due to that Fe(VI) could be fast
340
self-decomposed under high concentration, resulted in a similar effective Fe(VI)
341
amount acting on the biofilm (Lee et al. 2014). Therefore, in order to enhance the
342
biocidal effect of Fe(VI), other approaches rather than simply increasing the Fe(VI)
343
dosing rate should be explored (See details in Section 3.2).
344 345
3.2 Enhancing the biocidal effect of ferrate through pulse dosing strategy
346
The pulse dosing strategy (i.e. split a single high rate dosing event into three low rate
347
dosing events, Table 1) was applied to explore if it could enhance the biocidal effect
348
of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilms. The viability of the microorganisms in sewer
349
biofilms after pulse dosing was compared with that obtained after a single high rate
350
dosing and the results were summarized in Figure 2. The results clearly show that the
351
percentage of viable microorganisms in sewer biofilms can be significantly reduced
352
by applying the pulse dosing strategy with different Fe(VI) dosing rates from low to
353
high. In particular, the viability of the microorganisms decreased from 61.5% with a
354
single dosing of 60 mg-Fe/L to 36.8% with three dosing of 20 mg-Fe/L. Also, the
355
percentage of viable microorganisms reduced from 41.4% to 33.1% when a single
356
dosage of 120-mg Fe/L was divided into 40 mg-Fe/L for three times dosing. When
357
applying a dosage of 60 mg-Fe/L for three times (180 mg-Fe/L in total) on the biofilm,
358
the overall viability of the microorganisms could further reduced to 17.6%, which is
359
only about half of that achieved with a single dosage of 200 mg-Fe/L.
360 361
The results above suggested that the biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm
362
could be reinforced by applying pulse dosing strategy. During the Fe(VI) treatment,
363
its self-decomposition is recognized as an unfavorable factor to its treatment 15
364
effectiveness. It has been reported that the self-decomposition rate of Fe(VI) followed
365
the second-order kinetics with respect to Fe(VI) concentration (Lee et al. 2014, Sarma
366
et al. 2012). This suggested that Fe(VI) will be decomposed more rapidly with a
367
higher initial concentration. Therefore, if the pulse dosing of Fe(VI) with a low
368
concentration was applied, the fast self-decomposition of Fe(VI) under high
369
concentration conditions could be avoid. Based on the second-order kinetics, it could
370
be estimated that the maximum lasting duration of Fe(VI) in the system could be
371
increased about 3 time if a high-rate dosing event being divided into three low-rate
372
dosing event. With a potential longer lasting duration, the actual Fe(VI) loadings
373
taking effect on the biofilm may be increased. As a result, the biocidal effect of Fe(VI)
374
could be enhanced. In addition, as Fe(VI) has been found to change the extracellular
375
polymeric substances (EPS) components in sewage sludge (Zhang et al. 2016), it may
376
also be able to react with the EPS of sewer biofilm and resulted in a loose structure
377
after the first or second dosing event. Therefore, the penetration depth of Fe(VI) into
378
the biofilm could increase during the following treatment and its biocidal effect was
379
consequently improved. The highest inactivation rate achieved by Fe(VI) dosing
380
revealed in this study (viability of 17.6%) was slightly lower than that achieved by
381
FNA dosing (viability <15%) as reported by Jiang et al (2011). However, it should be
382
noted that the optimzation of the pulse dosing strategy was not included in this study.
383
It is quite possible that the viability of the microorganisms in biofilms could further
384
decreased after optimizing the Fe(VI) dosing rate and frequency, which is worthy to
385
be investigated in future.
16
386 387
3.3 The effect of pH on the biocidal effect of Fe(VI)
388
The viability of the microorganisms in biofilms treated with Fe(VI) (120 mg-Fe/L for
389
60 min) at different initial pH was evaluated, with the results presented in Figure 3.
390
Overall, the pH of the wastewater did not significantly affect the viability of the
391
microorganisms at the tested range. The drop of pH from 9 to 6 slightly decreased the
392
percentage of the viable microorganisms in sewer biofilms, while a more notable
393
decrease from 36.3% to 28.0% was observed when the pH is changing from 6 to 5.
394 395
It has been reported that the effectiveness of Fe(VI) treatment under acidic conditions
396
is much better than that under basic conditions (Shin et al. 2018). However, in this
397
study, we did not observe of significant enhancement in biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on
398
sewer biofilm when the pH changing from 9 to 5. This is probably due to the increase
399
of pH of wastewater to basic range after Fe(VI) dosing (Figure S2). Actually, the
400
effectiveness of Fe(VI) treatment was also related to the proportion of different Fe(VI)
401
species in the water. Fe(VI) can be disassociated into different species (FeO42-,
402
HFeO4- and H2FeO4) according to the pH, and the protonated forms of Fe(VI)
403
(HFeO4- and H2FeO4) were found to be more reactive than FeO42- (Cho et al. 2006).
404
The fraction of different Fe(VI) species in the experiments in this section was
405
calculated based on the pH profiles and its disassociation constants (pKa1=3.50 and
406
pKa2=7.23). The results show that the average proportion of HFeO4- was changed in a
407
narrow range between 0.4% to 5 % (Figure 3), resulted in the unobvious enhancement
408
in the biocidal effect of Fe(VI). In fact, in most cases, the inactivation of
409
microorganisms by protonated Fe(VI) was achieved under buffered condition
410
(phosphate buffer) (Cho et al. 2006, Hu et al. 2012). However, to maintain the pH of
17
411
wastewater with phosphate buffer would induce great amount of phosphate into the
412
sewer system. It may consequently increase the burden of phosphorus removal on the
413
downstream WWTPs. As phosphorus is an essential nutrient for organisms, without
414
proper treatment, its discharged could cause eutrophication in receiving water (Jiang
415
and Yuan 2015). Since Fe(VI) could already pose considerable biocidal effect on the
416
sewer biofilm under natural pH through pulse dosing stratagy, to enhance its biocidal
417
effect by adjusting the pH of wastewater is unnecessary.
418
419
3.4 Fe(VI) reduces the abundances of functional genes responsible for sulfate
420
reduction and methanogensis
421
The abundances of bacterial 16S rRNA, archaeal 16S rRNA, dsrA and mcrA genes in
422
the viable cells in sewer biofilms with and without Fe(VI) treatment (60mg Fe/L,
423
three times dosing) were compared in Figure 4. The bacterial 16S rRNA and archaeal
424
16S rRNA genes decreased by 74.4% and 84.2%, respectively, indicating that archaea
425
are more vulnerable to Fe(VI) treatment than bacteria. Overall, the decreases of total
426
viable bacteria and archaea in the sewer biofilms revealed by PMA-qPCR analysis
427
were in good agreement with that suggested by Live/Dead Staining (Figure 2), which
428
further confirmed the strong biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm.
429 430
The abundances of dsrA and mcrA genes were also decreased significantly after Fe(VI)
431
treatment. As shown in Figure 4, the abundance of dsrA in the viable microorganism
432
with Fe(VI) treatment was only 15.8% of that without Fe(VI) treatment and the
433
abundance of mcrA remained only 13.4% after Fe(VI) exposure. The dsrA gene
434
encodes the dissimilatory sulfate reductase, which catalyses the dissimilatory
435
reduction of sulfate to sulfite during sulfidogenic processes (Ben-Dov et al. 2007).
18
436
Similarly, mcrA is a key gene responsible for methanogenesis. It encodes the terminal
437
enzyme complex in the methane generation pathway, i.e. methyl coenzyme-M
438
reductase, which catalyses the reduction of a methyl group bound to coenzyme-M,
439
with the concomitant release of methane (Luton et al. 2002). The decreases of dsrA
440
and mcrA abundances in sewer biofilms indicated its sulfidogenic and methanogenic
441
activities were strongly inhibited by Fe(VI) dosing.
442 443
3.5 Relative abundances of viable SRB and MA decreasing after Fe(VI) exposure
444
The microbial communities with viable cells in the sewer biofilms with and without
445
Fe(VI) treatment (60mg-Fe/L, three times dosing) were evaluated through Illumina
446
Miseq sequencing and compared in Figure S3, SI, with their alpha diversity indices
447
listed in Table S3, SI. The relative abundances of viable SRB and MA in sewer
448
biofilms were explored in detail and compared in Figure 5. As shown in Figure 5A,
449
the SRB in sewer biofilms were mainly affiliated within seven genera
450
(Desulforhabdus, Desulfobacter Desulfococcus Desulfobacterium Desulfobulbus
451
Desulfomonile Desulfomicrobium), with Desulforhabdus (1.7%) being predominant in
452
the untreated biofilm. After Fe(VI) treatment, the abundances of five SRB genera
453
(Desulforhabdus, Desulfobacter Desulfococcus Desulfobacterium Desulfomicrobium)
454
were decreased, while the relative abundances of Desulfobulbus and Desulfomonile
455
increased slightly. However, the relative abundances of total SRB were still decreased
456
by 63% as presented in Figure 6B, which indicated that SRB in the biofilms were
457
more sensitive to Fe(VI) treatment than other microorganisms. This is probably due to
458
that SRB are located in the out layer of the sewer biofilm (Sun et al. 2014), where the
459
Fe(VI) concentration was higher than that in the inner layer.
460
19
461
Similarly, the relative abundance of MA was significantly decreased by 90% after
462
Fe(VI) treatment (Figure 5B). Specifically, the proportions of three MA genera found
463
in
464
Methano-methylovorans) were all dropped, with the Methanobacterium became
465
almost negligible after Fe(VI) dosing (Figure 5A). MA usually showed a lower
466
tolerance than bacteria to many chemicals such as oxygen, sulfide and long-chain
467
fatty acids, due to their special compositions of cell membrane (Dong et al. 2019).
468
This is also true in the case of Fe(VI) as suggested by the results of this study.
the
tested
biofilm
(i.e.
Methanobacterium,
Methanosaeta
and
469 470
The decreases of relative abundances of SRB and MA in the sewer biofilm were
471
consistent with that revealed by PMA-qPCR, as numbers of dsrA and mcrA genes
472
decreased more substantially than total bacterial 16S rRNA gene. These results
473
indicated that Fe(VI) posed strong biocidal effect on SRB and MA in sewer biofilms.
474
The complete suppression of sulfate reduction and methane production in sewer
475
biofilms could be achieved even when not all microorganisms were inactivated.
476 477
3.6 Suppression of sulfidogenic and methanogenic activities after Fe(VI) dosage to
478
sewer reactors
479
The sulfide and methane production rates in the Fe(VI) dosed sewer reactor R2
480
relative to the control reactor R3 were shown in Figure 6A. The sulfide and methane
481
production were completely suppressed after Fe(VI) dosage commerced on Day 0.
482
Afterwards, the SPR and MPR were slowly recovered without significant lag phase.
483
The recovery phase could be well described by the Gompertz growth model (Huang
484
2003), suggested that the recovery process was similar to microbial regrowth.
485
According to the model prediction, the time required for 50% recovery (RT50) of SPR 20
486
was 10.1 days, while the RT50 of MPR would took much longer 44.5 days. The RT50
487
of SPR and MPR after Fe(VI) dosage were comparable to that after FNA dosage as
488
reported by Jiang et al.(2011), despite that the viability of the biofilm after Fe(VI)
489
treatment observed in this study was slightly higher. One possible reason is that Fe(VI)
490
dosing may destory the EPS produced by the microorganisms situated in the sewer
491
biofilm and consequently result in a loose biofilm structure (Wu et al. 2015, Zhang et
492
al. 2016), Fe(VI) dosing could cause significant biofilm detachment in the reactor, as
493
suggested by a substaintial increase in the VSS concentration of the effluent after
494
Fe(VI) dosage (Figer 6B). Therefore, the viable microganisms attached on the sewer
495
reactor became less and the recovery period was prolonged.
496 497
3.7 Practical implication
498
This study, for the first time, demonstrated the rapid and strong biocidal effect of
499
Fe(VI) on the sulfidogenic and methanogenic sewer biofilms. The inactivation of
500
microorganims in the sewer biofilm could be accomplished within 15 mins for every
501
single dosing. By innovatively applying the pulse dosing strategy, the biocidal effect
502
could be significantly enhanced and satisfactory inactivation efficiency could be
503
realized. The detailed investigation into SRB and MA revealed decreases in both
504
functional genes copies and relative abundances after Fe(VI) exposure. This indicated
505
that SRB and MA might be more vulnerable to Fe(VI) exposure than other
506
microorganisms in sewer biofilms. All these results indicated that Fe(VI) has a
507
promising perspective in controlling sulfide and methane in sewer systems, and thus a
508
new method for sulfide and methane control using Fe(VI) can be proposed.
509 510
The traditional chemical strategies for sulfide control in sewer mainly rely on the
21
511
oxidation, precipitation and reducing gas-liquid transfer of sulfide already generated
512
and constant dosing is required (Ganigue et al. 2011). The biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on
513
the sewer biofilm can result in a long recovery period for sulfide and methane
514
production, which makes interminttent dosing of Fe(VI) possible. Consequently, the
515
chemical dosing amount could be largely reduced. Besides, as the wastewater in
516
sewers are usually flowing, continous dosing is needed to ensure the exposure time
517
long enough for the inactivation process. The short exposure time required for Fe(VI)
518
treatment suggested that chemcial usage for each dosing event is low, which further
519
guarantees the low chemcial consumption and also improves the ease of operation.
520 521
There are many other potential advantages regarding the Fe(VI) dosing. The reduction
522
of Fe(VI) would produce nontoxic Fe(III) hydroxides, which could precipitate sulfide
523
in sewers at the downstream location (Zhang et al. 2009). Adding iron salts in sewers
524
could also be beneficial to phosphorus removal at the downstream WWTP, where iron
525
sulfide precipitates are oxidised in aeration tanks, regenerating iron phosphate
526
precipitates (Gutierrez et al. 2010). A more recent study also demonstrated iron salts
527
dosed in sewers could decrease sulfide generation in sludge digestions and promote
528
the dewatering performance of anaerobic digested sludge. (Rebosura et al. 2018)
529 530
During the practical application of Fe(VI), its relatively high price used to be a
531
concern. However, based on the intermittent dosing stragegy and short exposure time,
532
the total cost for the chemical is expected to be low. We estimated the chemical cost
533
of Fe(VI) dosing to achieve 80% sulfide control is $ 0.02/m3 or $1.6/kg-S, based on
534
the results in Section 3.5 (total Fe(VI) dosage of 180 mg-Fe/L with an exposure time
535
of 45 min and a dosing interval of 4.5 days for achieving sulfide control efficiency of
22
536
80%). It is much lower than the chemcial costs of many other chemical dosing
537
methods, such as using ferric/ferrous and nitrate (Table S4, SI). Also, studies have
538
suggested that Fe(VI) could be generate in situ through wet chemical method by the
539
reactions of Fe(III) oxides or their salts with hypochlorite (OCl−) in highly alkaline
540
solution (Waite 2012). Alternatively, it could be produced through electrochemical
541
synthesis with the use of iron electrodes (Jiang et al. 2015b, Nikolić-Bujanović et al.
542
2016). By applying these methods, the costs for the chemcial consumption might be
543
further reduced.
544 545
The effects of Fe(VI) dosing on the wastewater characteristics, such as the COD
546
decrease and pH elevation, were not included in this study, which should be fully
547
evaluated in the future. However, it should be noted that Fe(VI) would not be added to
548
the entire sewer network at the same time. By adding Fe(VI) to different sections of a
549
network at different times, the impacts on wastewater characteristics at the
550
downstream WWTPs could be alleviated and the pH would be neutralized. Therefore,
551
further optimization of the Fe(VI) dosing strategy at the network scale should be
552
carried out, to achieve effective sulfide and methane control in sewer with the
553
minimal chemical comsumption rate and avoiding potential adverse impact on
554
downstream WWTPs. Overall, the intermittent dosing of Fe(VI) with pulse dosing
555
strategy can be a cost-effective strategy for sewer corrosion, odour and greenhouse
556
gas control, which bears great application potential in the sewer management.
557 558
4. Conclusions
559
This study evaluated the biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sulfidegenic and
560
methanogenic sewer biofilm and the following conclusions can be drawn; 23
561
Fe(VI) has a rapid biocidal effect on the microorganisms in the sewer biofilm,
562
with the inactivation process achieved within 15 min through a single dosing.
563
The biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm could be enhanced through
564
pulse dosing strategy and is not affected by the pH of the wastewater.
565
Fe(VI) significantly decreased the functional genes responsible for sulfidogenesis
566
and methanogenesis and also reduced the relative abundances of SRB and MA in
567
sewer biofilms.
568
The rapid and strong biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm suggested that
569
it could be intermittently added for controlling sulfide and methane production in
570
sewers, which is a cost-effective strategy for sewer corrosion, odour and
571
greenhouse gas control.
572 573
Acknowledgement
574
This work was partially supported by the Recruitment Program of Global Experts,
575
China; the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51578391, 51608374,
576
51978492 and 51538008); the Program for Young Excellent Talents in Tongji
577
University, the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (No.
578
2016KJ012) and the State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse
579
Foundation, China (No. PCRRK18007).
580
581
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582 583 584 585 586 587 588
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740 741 742
28
Table and Figure Legends
743 744
Table 1. The experimental conditions used in viability tests.
745 746
Figure 1. (A) Percentage of viable microorganisms in biofilms after Fe(VI) treatment
747
with different concentrations and exposure times. (B) The dependency of viable
748
percentages in biofilms on Fe(VI) concentration. Symbols represent for the
749
experimental measurements and the line represents for the modelling result with a
750
3-parameter exponential decay model.
751 752
Figure 2. Microbial viability after being exposed to Fe(VI) with different dosing
753
modes and concentrations, the total reaction time was 60 min.
754 755
Figure 3. Effect of pH on the biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm.
756 757
Figure 4. Quantification of bacterial 16S rRNA, archaeal 16S rRNA, dsrA and mcrA
758
genes in the sewer biofilms with and without Fe(VI) treatment (60 mg-Fe/L, three
759
times dosing).
760 761
Figure 5. Relative abundances of different SRB and MA genera (A) and total SRB
762
and MA (B) in the sewer biofilms with and without Fe(VI) treatment (60 mg-Fe/L,
763
three times dosing).
764 765
Figure 6. (A) Sulfide and methane production rates of the reactor treated by Fe(VI),
766
relative to the corresponding control reactor rates. (B) Variation of volatile suspended
767
solids in the effluent of the reactor treated with Fe(VI).
29
Table 1 The experimental conditions used in viability tests Experiment No.
I
II
III
Exposure time (min)
pH
Dosing mode
[Fe(VI)](mg-Fe /L)
15
Original pH
Single doing
30
Original pH
Single doing
60
Original pH
Single doing
0, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 200 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 200 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150, 200
60
5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Single dosing
120
60
Original pH
Single dosing,
60, 120, 200
20 for each dosing
Original pH
Three times dosing
20, 40, 60
Figure 1. (A) Percentage of viable microorganisms in biofilms after Fe(VI) treatment with different concentrations and exposure times. (B) The dependency of viable percentages in biofilms on Fe(VI) concentration. Symbols represent for the experimental measurements and the line represents for the modelling result with a 3-parameter exponential decay model.
Figure 2. Microbial viability after being exposed to Fe(VI) with different dosing modes and concentrations, and the total reaction time was 60 min.
Figure 3 Effect of pH on the biocidal effect of Fe(VI) on the sewer biofilm.
Figure 4. Quantification of bacterial 16S rRNA, archaeal 16S rRNA, dsrA and mcrA genes in sewer biofilms with and without Fe(VI) treatment (60 mg-Fe/L, three times dosing).
Figure 5. Relative abundances of different SRB and MA genera (A) and total SRB and MA (B) in the sewer biofilm with and without Fe(VI) treatment (60 mg-Fe/L, three times dosing).
Figure 6. (A) Sulfide and methane production rates of the reactor treated by Fe(VI), relative to the corresponding control reactor rates, (B) Variation of volatile suspended solids in the effluent of the reactor treated with Fe(VI).
Highlights
• • • • •
Fe(VI) could pose a rapid biocidal effect on the sewer biofilm. The biocidal effect of Fe(VI) could be enhanced by pulse dosing. The relative abundances of viable SRB and MA dropped with Fe(VI) dosing. Fe(VI) led to complete suppression of sulfidogenic and methanogenic activities. Fe(VI) dosing strategy is cost-effective for sulfide and methane control in sewers.
Declaration of interests ☒ The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. ☐The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: