Abstract

The ecological floating bed (EFB) has been used extensively for the purification of eutrophication water. However, the traditional EFB (T-EFB) often exhibits a decline in nitrogen and phosphorus removal because of the limited adsorption capacity of fillers and inadequate electron donors. In the present study, a series of electrolysis-ecological floating beds (EC-EFBs) were constructed to investigate the decontamination performance of conventional pollutants. EC-EFB outperformed T-EFB in terms of nitrogen and phosphorus removal. Its removal efficiency of total nitrogen and total phosphorus was 20.51–32.95% and 45.06–96.20%, which were higher than that in T-EFB.. Moreover, the plants in EC-EFB demonstrated higher metabolic activity than those in T-EFB. Under the electrolysis condition of 0.51 mA/cm2 for 24 h, the malondialdehyde content and superoxide dismutase activity in EC-EFB were 6.08 nmol/g and 22.61 U/g, which were significantly lower compared to T-EFB (38.65 nmol/g and 26.13 U/g). And the soluble protein content of plant leaves increased from 3.31 mg/g to 5.72 mg/g in EC-EFB. Microbial analysis revealed that electrolysis could significantly change the microbial community and facilitate the proliferation of nitrogen-functional microbes, such as Thermomonas, Hydrogenophaga, Deinococcus, and Zoogloea. It is important to highlight that the hydrogen evolution reaction at the cathode area facilitated phosphorus removal in EC-EFB, thereby inhibiting phosphorus leaching. This study provides a promising and innovative technology for the purification of eutrophic water.

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