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Contribution of extracellular polymeric substances and microbial community on the safety of drinking water quality: By mean of Cu/activated carbon biofiltration.

Authors :
Bi, Zhihao
Li, Tong
Xing, Xueci
Qi, Peng
Li, Zesong
Hu, Chun
Xu, Xiaoran
Sun, Zhimin
Xu, Gang
Chen, Chaoxiang
Ma, Kunyu
Source :
Chemosphere. Jan2022:Part 2, Vol. 286, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Change in water quality was investigated with laboratory-scale ozone-biological activated carbon filters using copper-modified granular activated carbon (Cu/GAC) and unmodified granular activated carbon (GAC). In the first seven days of the experimental period, Cu/GAC removed organic matter more efficiently owing to its enhanced adsorption capacity. As the running time increased, the amount of disinfection by-products (DBPs), dissolved organic carbon, and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) increased sharply in the effluent of the Cu/GAC filter (CCW). More importantly, the EPS suspended in the CCW exhibited weaker flocculating efficiency and hydrophobicity, causing more active chemical reactions between chlorine and EPS substances. The copper species significantly limited the microbial biomass (0.01 nmol/L adenosine triphosphate) but stimulated the secretion of significant amounts of EPS by microorganisms for self-protection. Furthermore, the microbial community in the bulk water was successfully shaped by Cu/GAC, resulting in a continuous supply of EPS-derived DBP precursors and a sharp rise in chlorine consumption in the downstream drinking water distribution. Therefore, use of modified GAC materials, similar to Cu/GAC, as carrier materials for biological activated carbon (BAC) treatment remains controversial, despite enhanced pollutant adsorption capacity. This is the first study to reveal the mechanism of BAC-modified materials for water quality stability. The study potentially contributes to a comprehensive understanding of the effects of biofilm transformation and microbial community succession on drinking water quality. These results showed that tap water safety risks could be reduced by improving BAC pretreatment in drinking water treatment plants. [Display omitted] • Effect of biofiltration with Cu/GAC on DBPs and pathogenic bacteria were investigated. • Cu/GAC exhibited enhanced organic pollutants adsorption capacity compared with GAC. • More DOC, DBPs precursors, and EPS were detected in the effluent of Cu/GAC biofilter. • Cu/GAC successfully shaped the microbial community in the bulk water. • It is controversial that Cu/GAC can be used as BAC carrier materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
286
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153528363
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.131686