Abstract

In the water environment such as lakes, there is a phenomenon that the sediment and overlying water are polluted at the same time. In this study, A microbial electrochemical system with an embedded active electrode was developed for simultaneous removal of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in sediment and antibiotics in overlying water by in-situ utilization of electrons. In the closed-circuit group, the pyrene concentration in sediment decreased from 9.94 to 2.08mg/L in 96 d, and the sulfamethoxazole concentration in water decreased from 5.12 to 1.12mg/L in 168h. These values were 18.71 % and 31.21 % higher, respectively, than those of the open-circuit group. The pyrene degradation pathway may be from polycyclic aromatic substances to low-cyclic aromatic hydrocarbons via successive breakdown of benzene rings. Multiple metabolites produced by reduction verified that SMX or its intermediates were reductively degraded in water. On the active electrode, the relative abundances of Acetobacterium and Piscinibacter, which were genera related to SMX degradation, was promoted, while the electricity-producing genus Pseudomonas was inhibited. ccdA, pksS, torC, and acsE genes related to extracellular electron transport may accelerate electron transport. Electrons could be transferred to SMX under the influence of proteins involved in extracellular electron transport, and SMX could be degraded reductively as an electron acceptor by microbes. Generation of electrons and in-situ utilization for simultaneous removal of solid-liquid two-phase pollutants will provide mechanistic insight into pollutant biodegradation by microbial electrochemistry and promote the development of sustainable bioremediation strategies for surface water.

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