Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
576367 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Photo(cata)lysis coupled with biodegradation is superior to photo(cata)lysis or biodegradation alone for removal of recalcitrant organic compounds. The two steps can be carried out sequentially or simultaneously via intimate coupling. We studied nitrobenzene (NB) removal and mineralization to evaluate why intimate coupling of photolysis with biodegradation was superior to sequential coupling. Employing an internal circulation baffled biofilm reactor, we compared direct biodegradation (B), biodegradation after photolysis (PÂ +Â B), simultaneous photolysis and biodegradation (P&B), and biodegradation with nitrophenol (NP) and oxalic acid (OA) added individually and simultaneously (BÂ +Â NP, BÂ +Â OA, and BÂ +Â NPÂ +Â OA); NP and OA were NB's main UV-photolysis products. Compared with B, the biodegradation rate PÂ +Â B was lower by 13-29%, but intimately coupling (P&B) had a removal rate that was 10-13% higher; mineralization showed similar trends. BÂ +Â OA gave results similar to P&B, BÂ +Â NP gave results similar to PÂ +Â B, and BÂ +Â OAÂ +Â NP gave results between PÂ +Â B and P&B, depending on the amount of OA and NP added. The photolysis product OA accelerated NB biodegradation through a co-substrate effect, but NP was inhibitory. Although decreasing the UV photolysis time could minimize the inhibition impact of NP in PÂ +Â B, P&B gave the fastest removal of NB by accentuating the co-substrate effect of OA.
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Authors
Lihui Yang, Yongming Zhang, Qi Bai, Ning Yan, Hua Xu, Bruce E. Rittmann,