Mutual symbiosis of electroactive bacteria and denitrifiers for improved refractory carbon utilization and nitrate reduction
X. Yang (TU Delft - Sanitary Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Ocean University of China)
Mingchen Yao (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Peng Li (China Water Environmental Group Limited)
J.P. van der Hoek (Waternet, TU Delft - Sanitary Engineering)
Lujing Zhang (China Water Environmental Group Limited)
G. Liu (TU Delft - Sanitary Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
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Abstract
Mutual symbiosis of electroactive bacteria (EAB) and denitrifier may be the key for solving the refractory carbon and residual nitrogen in wastewater treatment plant effluent. However, its application is hampered by unclear co-metabolic model and uncertain electron transfer. Here, we achieved 3–5 times increase in refractory carbon degradation, 40 % improvement in denitrification, and 36.0 % decrease in N2O emission by co-culturing P. aeruginosa strain GWP-1 and G. sulfurreducens. Such an enhancement is obtained by both refractory carbon co-metabolism and interspecies electron transfer (IET) between GWP-1 and G. sulfurreducens. Importantly, IET was quantified via isotopic approach, which revealed that G. sulfureducens supplies more electrons to GWP-1 when the system was fed with cellulose (0.071 mM) than glucose (0.012 mM). This study demonstrates that the residual refractory carbon and nitrogen in treated wastewater could be further converted by mutual symbiosis of EAB and denitrifiers, which paves a synergic way for pollution and carbon reduction.