Abstract

Aerobic biocathodes are effective construct for the simultaneous nitrification and denitrification, but the disturbance of cathodic oxygen reduction on ammonia oxidation and denitrification remains unclear. In this study, we revealed the oxygen reduction peak at −0.4 V (versus silver/silver chloride) by cyclic voltammetry analysis at a cathode without a biofilm. The reduction peak, however, showed a right shift from −0.4 to −0.3 V for the biocathode, indicating that the aerobic biocathode could simultaneously perform traditional nitrification and cathode oxygen reduction. Therefore, different electrode potentials ranging from −0.5 to −0.1 V were designed for regulating the ammonia oxidation rate, and the results showed that the highest oxidation rate reached 3.08 mg/h/L at a potential of −0.2 V under a low-aeration rate of 5 mL/min. High-throughput sequencing showed that Nitrosomonas and Rhodococcus were the dominant nitrogen removal genera in the biocathode, and the abundance of Devosia was related to the interactions between the aeration rate and the electrode potential. Furthermore, the amoC and hao genes responded to aeration and electrode potential regulation, and −0.2 V was more suitable for promoting the denitrification process under low-aeration conditions. Therefore, these findings provided new insights on cathodic potential control for ammonia oxidation and nitrogen removal as well as for the regulation of microbial communities.

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