Back to Search Start Over

Mass-transfer-limited biodegradation at low concentrations-evidence from reactive transport modeling of isotope profiles in a bench-scale aquifer

Authors :
Martin Elsner
Adrian Mellage
Martin Thullner
Mehdi Gharasoo
Aileen Melsbach
Ralf Zimmermann
Xin Cao
Olaf A. Cirpka
Christian Griebler
Fengchao Sun
Source :
Environ. Sci. Technol. 55, 7386-7397 (2021), Environmental Science & Technology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Amer Chemical Soc, 2021.

Abstract

Organic contaminant degradation by suspended bacteria in chemostats has shown that isotope fractionation decreases dramatically when pollutant concentrations fall below the (half-saturation) Monod constant. This masked isotope fractionation implies that membrane transfer is slow relative to the enzyme turnover at μg L–1 substrate levels. Analogous evidence of mass transfer as a bottleneck for biodegradation in aquifer settings, where microbes are attached to the sediment, is lacking. A quasi-two-dimensional flow-through sediment microcosm/tank system enabled us to study the aerobic degradation of 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM), while collecting sufficient samples at the outlet for compound-specific isotope analysis. By feeding an anoxic BAM solution through the center inlet port and dissolved oxygen (DO) above and below, strong transverse concentration cross-gradients of BAM and DO yielded zones of low (μg L–1) steady-state concentrations. We were able to simulate the profiles of concentrations and isotope ratios of the contaminant plume using a reactive transport model that accounted for a mass-transfer limitation into bacterial cells, where apparent isotope enrichment factors *ε decreased strongly below concentrations around 600 μg/L BAM. For the biodegradation of organic micropollutants, mass transfer into the cell emerges as a bottleneck, specifically at low (μg L–1) concentrations. Neglecting this effect when interpreting isotope ratios at field sites may lead to a significant underestimation of biodegradation.<br />Please provide a synopsis

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environ. Sci. Technol. 55, 7386-7397 (2021), Environmental Science & Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d8a18a30090b7b69fa45ecf6ccd2e43