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The effect of sewage sludge containing microplastics on growth and fruit development of tomato plants
2021
Hernández-Arenas, Ricardo | Beltrán-Sanahuja, Ana | Navarro-Quirant, Paula | Sanz-Lazaro, Carlos
Microplastics (MPs) are becoming an environmental growing concern, being the sewage sludge applied to agriculture fields one of the most important inputs to the environment. To date, there is no standardized protocol for their extraction and changes in vegetative growth and fruit maturation on cultivated plants induced by sludge containing MPs have not been studied yet. Sewage sludge from three different wastewater treatment plants located in Murcia, Spain, were studied. First, the microplastic concentration was estimated and, then, the effects of the sewage sludge in the development of tomato plants and fruit production was analyzed. The measured parameters in tomato plants were both, biomass and length, for shoot and root part, as well as, stem diameter and tomato production. The present work has developed and validated a protocol for the extraction and quantification of MPs comprising several shapes, materials and sizes from samples of sewage sludges, which offers a good compromise for the extraction of different types of microplastic. The protocol used for MPs extraction had a recovery efficiency of 80 ± 3% (mean ± SE) and used bicarbonate, to maximize MPs extraction. The mean abundance of MPs in the studied sewage sludge samples was 30,940 ± 8589 particles kg⁻¹ dry weight. Soils with sludge containing MPs fostered the growth of tomato plants, while delaying and diminished fruit production. However, other factors or their interactions with MPs could have influenced the outcomes. Further studies are necessary to corroborate these findings and explain the mechanisms of possible effects of MPs on plants.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Activation of sulfite autoxidation with CuFe2O4 prepared by MOF-templated method for abatement of organic contaminants
2020
Zhao, Xiaodan | Wu, Wenjing | Jing, Guohua | Zhou, Zuoming
Copper ferrite (denoted as CuFe₂O₄MOF), prepared via a complexation reaction to obtain bimetal–organic frameworks (Cu/Fe bi-MOFs), followed by a combustion process to remove the MOF template, is employed as a heterogeneous activator to promote sulfite autoxidation for the removal of organic contaminants. At pH 8.0, more than 80% of the recalcitrant organic contaminant iohexol (10 μM) can be removed within 2 min by the activation of sulfite (500 μM) with CuFe₂O₄MOF (0.1 g L⁻¹). CuFe₂O₄MOF exhibits more pronounced catalytic activity in accelerating sulfite autoxidation for iohexol abatement compared to that fabricated by hydrothermal and sol–gel combustion methods. Radical quenching studies suggest that the sulfate radical (SO₄•⁻) is the main reactive species responsible for iohexol abatement. The performance of CuFe₂O₄MOF/sulfite for iohexol abatement can be affected by several critical influencing factors, including the solution pH and the presence of humic acid, Cl⁻, and HCO₃⁻. The effect of the ionic strength and the results of the attenuated total reflectance–Fourier transform infrared (ATR–FTIR) analysis indicate that sulfite autoxidation in the presence of CuFe₂O₄MOF involves an inner-sphere interaction with the surface Cu(II) sites of CuFe₂O₄MOF. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) characterization suggests that the surface Cu(II)–Cu(I)–Cu(II) redox cycle is responsible for efficient SO₄•⁻ production from sulfite. Overall, CuFe₂O₄MOF can be considered an alternative activator for sulfite autoxidation for potential application in the treatment of organic-contaminated water.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Removal characteristics of a composite active medium for remediation of nitrogen-contaminated groundwater and metagenomic analysis of degrading bacteria
2019
Li, Shuo | Zhang, Yuling | Qian, Hong | Deng, Zhiqun | Wang, Xi | Yin, Siqi
To investigate the removal characteristics of ammonium-nitrogen (NH₄⁺-N), nitrite-nitrogen (NO₂⁻-N), nitrate-nitrogen (NO₃⁻-N), and total nitrogen from groundwater by a degradable composite active medium, kinetics, thermodynamics, and equilibrium adsorption, experiments were performed using scoria and degrading bacteria immobilized on scoria. Removal of NH₄⁺-N, NO₂⁻-N, and NO₃⁻-N was conducted in adsorption experiments using different times, initial concentrations, pH values, and groundwater chemical compositions (Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺, HCO₃⁻, CO₃²⁻, Fe²⁺, Mn²⁺, and SO₄²⁻). The results showed that the removal of nitrogen by the composite active medium was obviously better than that of scoria alone. The removal rates of NH₄⁺-N (C₀ = 5 mg/L), NO₂⁻-N (C₀ = 5 mg/L), and NO₃⁻-N (C₀ = 100 mg/L) by the composite active medium within 1 h were 96.05%, 82.40%, and 83.16%, respectively. The adsorption kinetics were well fitted to a pseudo-second order model, whereas the equilibrium adsorption agreed with the Freundlich model. With changes in the pH, variation in the removal could be attributed to the combined effect of hydrolysis and competitive ion adsorption, and the optimum pH was 7. Different concentration conditions, hardness, alkalinity, anions, and cations showed different promoting and inhibiting effects on the removal of nitrogen. A careful examination of ionic concentrations in adsorption batch experiments suggested that the sorption behavior of nitrogen onto the immobilized medium was mainly controlled by ion exchange. The degrading bacteria on the scoria surface were eluted and analyzed by metagenomic sequencing. There were significant differences in the number of operational taxons, relative abundances, and community diversity among degrading bacteria after adsorption of the three forms of nitrogen. The relative abundance of degrading bacteria was highest after NO₃⁻-N removal, and the diversity was highest after NO₂⁻-N removal. Pseudomonas and Serratia were the dominant genera that could efficiently remove NH₄⁺-N and NO₂⁻-N.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Identification of hydrochemical genesis and screening of typical groundwater pollutants impacting human health: A case study in Northeast China
2019
Zhai, Yuanzheng | Zheng, Fuxin | Zhao, Xiaobing | Xia, Xuelian | Teng, Yanguo
Concentrations of common pollutants in groundwater continue to increase, and emerging pollutants are also increasingly found worldwide, thereby increasingly impacting human activities. In this new situation, it is necessary, albeit more difficult, to once again recognize the hydrochemical genesis of groundwater and to subsequently screen the typical pollutants. Taking the groundwater of the Songnen Plain of Northeast China as an example, the hydrochemical genesis was identified using space interpolation, characteristic element ratio and factor analysis methods based on 368 groundwater samples. Subsequently, the typical pollutants with potential impacts on the health of the local residents were screened by the index system method newly established. All the measured hydrochemical compositions show an obvious spatial variation, with a uniform hydrochemical type of HCO3–Ca in the whole area. Both the major compositions (K, Na, Ca, Mg, HCO3, Cl and SO4) and trace compositions (Fe, Mn, Cu, Zn, Pb, As, F, I and Se) are mainly protogenetic in an environment impacted by the lixiviation of groundwater in the migration process in the strata, although these compositions have been impacted by human activities to varying degrees. The mass concentration of NO3–N has exceeded most of the major compositions except for HCO3 and Ca, which means the nitrogen pollution problem is already very serious; and this problem is mainly caused by the utilization of fertilizers and the discharge of industrial wastewater and domestic sewage. Human activities have obviously disrupted the natural dynamic balance of these chemicals between the environment and the groundwater, thereby intensifying the release of F, Fe and Mn from the environment. TDS, total hardness, tri-nitrogen, F, Fe, Mn, Pb and As in some parts are found to exceed the standards of groundwater quality to varying degrees. As, Pb, Fe, NO3–N, NO2–N, Mn, F and NH4–N are finally screened as the typical pollutants.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Geochemical factors controlling the occurrence of high-fluoride groundwater in the western region of the Ordos basin, northwestern China
2019
Su, He | Wang, Jiading | Liu, Jingtao
Hydrogeochemistry and isotope hydrology were carried out to investigate the spatial distribution of fluoride (F−) and the mechanisms responsible for its enrichment in the western region of the Ordos basin, northwestern China. Sixty-two groundwater samples from the unconfined aquifer and fifty-six from confined aquifer were collected during the pre-monsoon (June 2016). Over 77% of groundwater samples from the unconfined aquifer (F− concentration up to 13.30 mg/L) and approximately 66% from confined aquifer (with a maximum F− concentration of 3.90 mg/L) exhibit F− concentrations higher than the Chinese safe drinking limit (1.0 mg/L). High-F− groundwater presents a distinctive hydrochemical characteristic: a high pH value and HCO3− concentration with Ca-poor and Na-rich. Mineral dissolution (e.g., feldspar, calcite, dolomite, fluorite), cation exchange and evaporation in the aquifers predominate the formation of groundwater chemistry, which are also important for F− enrichment in groundwater. Mixing with unconfined groundwater is a significant mechanism resulting in the occurrence of high-F− groundwater in confined aquifer. These findings indicate that physicochemical processes play crucial roles in driving F− enrichment and that may be useful for studying F− occurrence in groundwater in arid and semi-arid areas.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Enhanced Cu(II)-mediated fenton-like oxidation of antimicrobials in bicarbonate aqueous solution: Kinetics, mechanism and toxicity evaluation
2019
Peng, Jianbiao | Zhang, Chaonan | Zhang, Ya | Miao, Dong | Zhang, Yaozong | Liu, Haijin | Li, Jinghua | Xu, Lei | Shi, Jialu | Liu, Guoguang | Gao, Shixiang
Increasing attention has been attracted in developing new technologies to remove chlorofene (CF) and dichlorofene (DCF), which were active agents in antimicrobials for general cleaning and disinfecting. This study investigated the significant influences of bicarbonate (HCO3−) on the degradation of CF and DCF in the Cu(II)-mediated Fenton-like system Cu2+/H2O2. Our results indicate that HCO3− may play a dual role to act 1) as a ligand to stabilize Cu(II), forming soluble [CuII(HCO3−)(S)]+ species to catalyze H2O2 producing hydroxyl radical (OH) and superoxide ion (O2−) and 2) as a OH scavenger. Furthermore, the reaction kinetics, mechanisms, and intermediates of CF and DCF were assessed. The apparent rate constants of CF and DCF were enhanced by a factor of 8.5 and 5.5, respectively, in the presence of HCO3− at the optimized concentration of 4 mM. Based on the intermediate identification and frontier electron densities (FEDs) calculations, the associated reaction pathways were tentatively proposed, including C–C scission, single or multiple hydroxylation, and coupling reaction. In addition, significant reduction in the aquatic toxicity of CF and DCF was observed after treatment with Cu2+/H2O2–HCO3- system, evaluated by Ecological Structure Activity Relationships (ECOSAR) program. These findings provide new insights into Cu(II)-mediated reactions to better understand the environmental fate of organic contaminants in carbonate-rich waters.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]The dynamic role of pH in microbial reduction of uranium(VI) in the presence of bicarbonate
2018
Xie, Jinchuan | Wang, Jinlong | Lin, Jianfeng | Zhou, Xiaohua
The negative effect of carbonate on the rate and extent of bioreduction of aqueous U(VI) has been commonly reported. The solution pH is a key chemical factor controlling U(VI)ₐq species and the Gibbs free energy of reaction. Therefore, it is interesting to study whether the negative effect can be diminished under specific pH conditions. Experiments were conducted using Shewanella putrefaciens under anaerobic conditions with varying pH values (4–9) and bicarbonate concentrations ([CO32−]T, 0–50 mmol/L). The results showed a clear correlation between the pH-bioreduction edges of U(VI)ₐq and the [CO32−]T. The specific pH at which the maximum bioreduction occurred (pHₘbᵣ) shifted from slightly basic to acidic pH (∼7.5–∼6.0) as the [CO32−]T increased (2–50 mmol/L). At [CO32−]T = 0, however, no pHₘbᵣ was observed in terms of increasing bioreduction with pH (∼100%, pH > 7). In the presence of [CO32−]T, significant bioreduction was observed at pHₘbᵣ (∼100% at 2–30 mmol/L [CO32−]T, 93.7% at 50 mmol/L [CO32−]T), which is in contrast to the previously reported infeasibility of bioreduction at high [CO32−]T. The pH-bioreduction edges were almost comparable to the pH-biosorption edges of U(VI)ₐq on heat-killed cells, revealing that biosorption is favorable for bioreduction. The end product of U(VI)ₐq bioreduction was characterized as insoluble nanobiogenic uraninite by HRTEM. The redox potentials of the master complex species of U(VI)ₐq, such as (UO2)4(OH)7+, (UO2)2CO3(OH)3−, and UO2(CO3)34−, were calculated to obtain insights into the thermodynamic reduction mechanism. The observed dynamic role of pH in bioreduction suggests the potential for bioremediation of uranium-contaminated groundwater containing high carbonate concentrations.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Potential ecotoxicological effects of elevated bicarbonate ion concentrations on marine organisms
2018
Gim, Byeong-Mo | Hong, Seongjin | Lee, Jung-Suk | Kim, Nam-Hyun | Kwon, Eun-Mi | Gil, Joon-Woo | Lim, Hyun-Hwa | Jeon, Eui-Chan | Khim, Jong Seong
Recently, a novel method for carbon capture and storage has been proposed, which converts gaseous CO2 into aqueous bicarbonate ions (HCO3−), allowing it to be deposited into the ocean. This alkalinization method could be used to dispose large amounts of CO2 without acidifying seawater pH, but there is no information on the potential adverse effects of consequently elevated HCO3− concentrations on marine organisms. In this study, we evaluated the ecotoxicological effects of elevated concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) (max 193 mM) on 10 marine organisms. We found species-specific ecotoxicological effects of elevated DIC on marine organisms, with EC50-DIC (causing 50% inhibition) of 11–85 mM. The tentative criteria for protecting 80% of individuals of marine organisms are suggested to be pH 7.8 and 11 mM DIC, based on acidification data previously documented and alkalinization data newly obtained from this study. Overall, the results of this study are useful for providing baseline information on ecotoxicological effects of elevated DIC on marine organisms. More complementary studies are needed on the alkalinization method to determine DIC effects on seawater chemistry and marine organisms.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Destruction processes of mining on water environment in the mining area combining isotopic and hydrochemical tracer
2018
Yang, Yonggang | Guo, Tingting | Jiao, Wentao
There is less research on the hydrological system and its destruction processes mechanism in the mining areas, especially combined application of isotope technology and chemical signals, which is a key scientific problem that need to be solved. This study takes Jinci spring area in Shanxi as a case study. It is based on the data of hydrology and mining condition from 1954 to 2015, combining monitoring experiments, O18, D, S34 and N15 tracing, chemical and model simulation. This study investigates the hydrological regularity and impacts of mining activities on water quantity and quality, and reveals the destruction process of hydrological system. The results show that: (1) Water chemical type shows an evolutionary trend of HCO3−-Ca2+-Mg2+→SO42--HCO3--Ca2+-Mg2+→SO42--Ca2+-Mg2+, due to the influence of exploitation and fault zones. Isotope tracer shows that mine pit water is formed by a mixture of pore water, karst water and surface water. (2) Although precipitation and seepage have a certain impact on the reducing of groundwater quantity, over-exploitation of water resource is still the main reason for reducing of groundwater quantity. Under the conditions of keeping the exploitation intensity at the current level or reducing it by 10%, groundwater level shows a declining trend. Under the condition of reducing it by 30%, groundwater level starts to rise up. When reducing by 50%, groundwater level reaches its highest point. Coalmining changes the runoff, recharge and discharge paths. (3) From 1985 to 2015, Water quality in the mining area is worsening. Ca2+ increases by 35.30%, SO42− increases by 52.80%, and TDS (Total Dissolved Solid) increases by 67.50%. Nitrates come from the industrial and domestic wastewater, which is generated by mining. The percentage of groundwater coming from gypsum dissolusion is 67.51%, and the percentage from coal measure strata water is 34.49%. The water qualities of river branches are generally deteriorated.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Mechanism of matrix-bound phosphine production in response to atmospheric elevated CO2 in paddy soils
2018
An, Shaorong | Niu, Xiaojun | Chen, Weiyi | Sheng, Hong | Lai, Senchao | Yang, Zhiquan | Gu, Xiaohong | Zhou, Shaoqi
To explore the effect of elevated CO₂ concentrations ([CO₂]) on phosphine formation in paddy fields, the matrix-bound phosphine (MBP) content, different phosphorus fractions and various carbon forms in soil samples from rice cultivation under varying CO₂ concentrations of 400 ppm, 550 ppm and 700 ppm by indoor simulation experiment were determined. This study showed that MBP concentration did not increase significantly with elevated [CO₂] over four-week cultivation periods of rice seedlings, regardless of soil layers. MBP had a significant positive correlation with total phosphorus (TP) and inorganic phosphorus (IP), and multiple stepwise linear regression analysis further indicated that MBP preservation in neutral paddy soils with depths of 0–20 cm may have been due to conversion from FeP and CaP. Based on redundancy analysis and forward selection analysis, speculated that the formation of MBP in the neutral paddy soils as the response to atmospheric elevated [CO₂] was due to two processes: (i) FeP transformation affected by the changes of soil respiration (SCO₂) and TOC was the main precursor for the production of MBP; and (ii) CaP transformation resulting from variation in HCO₃⁻ was the secondary MBP source. The complex combination of these two processes is simultaneously controlled by SCO₂. In a word, the soil environment in the condition of elevated [CO₂] was in favor of MBP storage in neutral paddy soils. The results of our study imply that atmospheric CO₂ participates in and has a certain impact on the global biogeochemical cycle of phosphorus.
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