Acute impact of Hg2+, Cu2+, and Ag+ on the formation of biopolymers and nitrogenous soluble microbiological products in activated sludge for wastewater treatment
2020
Liu, Tong | Wang, Zi | Wu, Linjie | Guo, Menghan | Yang, Chanyu | Cao, Xin | Qiu, Xiaopeng | Kong, Zan | Zhong, Min | Pan, Baozhu | Ke, Yanchun | Zheng, Xing
In the present work, acute impact of heavy metals on activated sludge was investigated, specifically the release of biopolymers and nitrogenous soluble microbiological products (N-SMP) that significantly impact tertiary effluent quality. Based on the previously reported studies, Hg²⁺ and Ag⁺ were selected as representative “non-essential” heavy metals, while Cu²⁺ was selected as the “essential” heavy metal. Stress tests show that under the present experimental conditions, adding a higher concentration of heavy metals to the activated sludge increases the concentration of biopolymers and SMP in the supernatant; N-SMP increased more significantly than carbonaceous products, implying a greater risk of formation of toxic nitrogenous disinfection by-products or membrane fouling in relevant tertiary treatment processes. The severity of the release of SMP into the supernatant depended on the heavy metal, with an order of Hg²⁺ > Ag⁺ > Cu²⁺ (“non-essential” > “essential”) under identical molar concentrations. The mass balance of typical organics (e.g., biopolymers) in SMP and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) in activated sludge was analyzed, and a negative correlation between the organics in the SMP and tightly bound EPS was observed, implying that a significant fraction of the SMP could be quickly released from the tightly bound EPS under heavy metal shock conditions and could be related to cell response or damage.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by National Agricultural Library