Activated carbon adsorption for mitigating the harmful effects of antibiotics on the biological activated sludge: Effect on heterotrophic kinetics through respirometry
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Wiley-Blackwell Verlag GmbH
Materia
Activated carbon Activated sludge Adsorption-enhanced bioreactor
Fecha
2024-07-31Referencia bibliográfica
García-Menéndez, L., Leyva-Díaz, J. C., & Ord oñez, S. (2024). Activated carbon adsorption for mitigating the harmful effects of antibiotics on the biological activated sludge: Effect on heterotrophic kinetics through respirometry. Water Environment Research, 96(8), e11086. https://doi.org/10.1002/wer.11086
Patrocinador
Gobierno del Principado de Asturias (IDI/2018/000116 and AYUD/2021/50450)Resumen
Conventional wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are not designed for the
abatement of antibiotics, and their effluents are one of the main entry ways of
these emerging contaminants to the aquatic environment, causing major
concern due to their toxicity, persistence, and bioaccumulation. When wastewater
containing antibiotics enters the bioreactor, they can impact microbial
communities of the activated sludge, affecting biodegradation processes of
organic matter and nutrients. There is scarce information about the effect of
activated carbon on the activated sludge within the bioreactor in presence of
antibiotics. In light of this, the effect of representative antibiotics, ciprofloxacin
(CIP), nalidixic acid (NAL), and erythromycin (ERY), on the performance of a
conventional activated sludge of a WWTP was analyzed by respirometry with
and without activated carbon. NAL and ERY negatively affected the net
heterotrophic biomass growth rate (r'x,H), with reduction percentages of
26%–90% and 31%–81%, respectively. The addition of activated carbon
mitigated this effect, especially for ERY, with increments of even 8% in the
r'x,H for the hybrid process when working with 5 ppm of ERY and 80 ppm of
activated carbon compared with the value in the absence of antibiotic and
activated carbon. This effect was attributed to the enhanced retention of ERY,
in comparison to NAL, on the surface of the activated carbon, probably due to
its higher molecular size and affinity towards the activated carbon (log
Kow = 3.06). This effect was more marked at low sludge retention times (below
8 days).





