Abstract

Previous studies mostly focused on the responses of anaerobic granular sludge (AGS) to one kind of microplastics during wastewater treatment. However, a wide variety of microplastics has been detected in wastewater. The multiple microplastics induced stress on AGS and the effectively mitigating strategy still remain unavailable. Herein, this work comprehensively excavated the influences of multiple microplastics (i.e., polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polystyrene (PS), polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP)) coexisting in the wastewater on AGS system from macroscopic to microcosmic aspects. Experimental results illustrated that microplastics decreased AGS granule size, increased cell inactivation and caused deteriorative methane recovery from wastewater. As such, this study then put great emphasis on proposing a mitigating strategy using hydrochar and disclosing the role of hydrochar in overcoming the stress induced by coexisting microplastics to AGS system. Physiological characterization and microbial community analysis demonstrated that hydrochar effectively mitigated the reductions in methane production by 50.6% and cell viability by 68.8% of microplastics-bearing AGS and reduced the toxicity of microplastics to microbial community in the AGS. Mechanisms investigation by fluorescence tagging and excitation emission matrix fluorescence spectroscopy with fluorescence regional integration (EEM-FRI) analysis revealed that hydrochar adsorbed/accumulated microplastics and enhanced microplastics-bearing AGS to secrete extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) with more humic acid generation, thus reducing the direct contact between microplastics and AGS. In addition, hydrochar weakened the AGS intracellular oxidative stress induced by microplastics, thereby completely eliminating the inhibition of microplastics on acidification efficiency of AGS, and partially mitigating the suppression on methanation.

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