Abstract

Conventional chemical and physical methods to remove antibiotics from wastewater consume large amount of energy and chemicals, and the efficiency of biological process in converting antibiotics is relatively low. Microbial electrolysis cell (MEC) has been employed to degrade recalcitrant organic compounds recently. Given it is an energy consuming device, it would be more sustainable if driven by renewable energy, e.g. power from microbial fuel cell (MFC). Here, chloramphenicol (CAP) was chosen as a representative antibiotic that is abundant in the environment, and Ag ion contained wastewater as electron acceptor in MFC, to demonstrate the feasibility of a self-driven system for recalcitrant removal and resource recovery. It was found that CAP removal in MEC can be successfully driven by Ag(I) reduced MFC without external energy consumption. Method of one-factor-at-a-time (OFAT) and response surface methodology (RSM) with central composite design were used to evaluate the system performance. Under the optimum condition, 99.8% of Ag(I) in MFC and 98.8% of CAP in MEC can be converted. EDX and XPS revealed that pure silver was obtained on the surface of electrode in MFC, reflecting Ag(I) was reduced to valuable product. The concept and methods developed in this study can be also applied to design other types of self-driven BES systems for simultaneous pollutants removal and resources recovery.

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