Hematite and multi-walled carbon nanotubes stimulate a faster syntrophic pathway during methanogenic beet sugar industrial wastewater degradation
Date
2017-09-22Author
Ambuchi, John Justo
Zhang, Zhaohan
Dong, Yue
Huang, Linlin
Feng, Yujie
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The quest to understand and subsequently improve the role played by bacteria and archaea in the degradation of organic matter
both in natural and engineered anaerobic ecosystems has intensified the utilization of nanoparticles. Microbial communities are
known to syntrophically cooperate during the anaerobic conversion of substrates into methane gas via the direct exchange of
electrons. In this study, the role of hematite (Fe2O3—750 mg/L) and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs—1500 mg/L)
during the degradation of beet sugar industrial wastewater (BSIW) in a batch experiment was investigated. Hematite and
MWCNTs enhanced methane gas generation by 35 and 20%, respectively. Furthermore, microbial syntrophic communities
might have exchanged metabolic electrons more directly, with hematite and MWCNTs serving as electron conduits between
the homoacetogens and methanogens, thereby establishing a direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET) pathway. Additionally,
hematite and MWCNTs enriched the bacteria Firmicutes while Chloroflexi reduced in abundance. Scanning electron microscopy
and confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that extracellular polymeric substances had noticeable interactions with
both hematite and MWCNTs. Our findings provide vital information for more understanding of the response of microbes to
hematite and MWCNTs in a complex natural environment.
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