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Ultrastructure of a bio-electrolytic methanogenic/methanotrophic granular biofilm for the complete degradation of tetrachloroethylene in contaminated groundwater

Authors :
M.-J. Levesque
Serge R. Guiot
Ruxandra Cimpoia
Ramona Kuhn
van Loosdrecht, M.
Kruize, R.
Lewandowski, Z.
Source :
Water Science and Technology. 55:465-471
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
IWA Publishing, 2007.

Abstract

The electrolytical methanogenic/methanotrophic coupling (eMaMoC) process was tested in a laboratory-scale single-stage reactor for the treatment of tetrachloroethene (PCE)-contaminated waters. A water electrolysis cell was placed directly in the effluent recirculation loop for the supply of both O2 and H2 to the system: H2 serving as the electron donor for both carbonate reduction into CH4 and reductive dechlorination. The concurrent presence of O2 and CH4 could be used by the methanotrophs for co-metabolically oxidising the chlorinated intermediates left over by the anaerobic transformation of PCE. At a PCE inlet of 33–52 μM and a hydraulic residence time (HRT) of 5.6 days, PCE reductive dechlorination to dichloroethene (DCE) was over 95% with a maximum DCE mineralisation of 83%. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation with 16S rRNA probes related to type I and type II methanotrophic bacteria were utilised to localise the methanotrophic communities in the anaerobic/aerobic granules. It evidenced that with operational time, along with increasing oxygenation rate, methanotrophic communities were specifically colonising onto the outermost layer of the anaerobic/aerobic granule.

Details

ISSN :
19969732 and 02731223
Volume :
55
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water Science and Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89e1e974eb7063a33b8f8fd014c030fe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2007.292