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Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants

Sediment internal nitrogen release is a significant pollution source in the overlying water of aquatic ecosystems. This study aims to remove internal nitrogen in sediment-water microcosms by coupling sediment microbial fuel cells (SMFCs) with submerged aquatic plants. Twelve tanks including four tre...

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Autores principales: Xu, Peng, Xiao, En-Rong, Xu, Dan, Zhou, Yin, He, Feng, Liu, Bi-Yun, Zeng, Lei, Wu, Zhen-Bin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5328281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28241072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172757
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author Xu, Peng
Xiao, En-Rong
Xu, Dan
Zhou, Yin
He, Feng
Liu, Bi-Yun
Zeng, Lei
Wu, Zhen-Bin
author_facet Xu, Peng
Xiao, En-Rong
Xu, Dan
Zhou, Yin
He, Feng
Liu, Bi-Yun
Zeng, Lei
Wu, Zhen-Bin
author_sort Xu, Peng
collection PubMed
description Sediment internal nitrogen release is a significant pollution source in the overlying water of aquatic ecosystems. This study aims to remove internal nitrogen in sediment-water microcosms by coupling sediment microbial fuel cells (SMFCs) with submerged aquatic plants. Twelve tanks including four treatments in triplicates were designed: open-circuit (SMFC-o), closed-circuit (SMFC-c), aquatic plants with open-circuit (P-SMFC-o) and aquatic plants with closed-circuit (P-SMFC-c). The changes in the bio-electrochemical characteristics of the nitrogen levels in overlying water, pore water, sediments, and aquatic plants were documented to explain the migration and transformation pathways of internal nitrogen. The results showed that both electrogenesis and aquatic plants could facilitate the mineralization of organic nitrogen in sediments. In SMFC, electrogenesis promoted the release of ammonium from the pore water, followed by the accumulation of ammonium and nitrate in the overlying water. The increased redox potential of sediments due to electrogenesis also contributed to higher levels of nitrate in overlying water when nitrification in pore water was facilitated and denitrification at the sediment-water interface was inhibited. When the aquatic plants were introduced into the closed-circuit SMFC, the internal ammonium assimilation by aquatic plants was advanced by electrogenesis; nitrification in pore water and denitrification in sediments were also promoted. These processes might result in the maximum decrease of internal nitrogen with low nitrogen levels in the overlying water despite the lower power production. The P-SMFC-c reduced 8.1%, 16.2%, 24.7%, and 25.3% of internal total nitrogen compared to SMFC-o on the 55th, 82th, 136th, and 190th days, respectively. The smaller number of Nitrospira and the larger number of Bacillus and Pseudomonas on the anodes via high throughput sequencing may account for strong mineralization and denitrification in the sediments under closed-circuit. The coupled P-SMFC system has shown good potential for the efficient removal of internal nitrogen.
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spelling pubmed-53282812017-03-09 Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants Xu, Peng Xiao, En-Rong Xu, Dan Zhou, Yin He, Feng Liu, Bi-Yun Zeng, Lei Wu, Zhen-Bin PLoS One Research Article Sediment internal nitrogen release is a significant pollution source in the overlying water of aquatic ecosystems. This study aims to remove internal nitrogen in sediment-water microcosms by coupling sediment microbial fuel cells (SMFCs) with submerged aquatic plants. Twelve tanks including four treatments in triplicates were designed: open-circuit (SMFC-o), closed-circuit (SMFC-c), aquatic plants with open-circuit (P-SMFC-o) and aquatic plants with closed-circuit (P-SMFC-c). The changes in the bio-electrochemical characteristics of the nitrogen levels in overlying water, pore water, sediments, and aquatic plants were documented to explain the migration and transformation pathways of internal nitrogen. The results showed that both electrogenesis and aquatic plants could facilitate the mineralization of organic nitrogen in sediments. In SMFC, electrogenesis promoted the release of ammonium from the pore water, followed by the accumulation of ammonium and nitrate in the overlying water. The increased redox potential of sediments due to electrogenesis also contributed to higher levels of nitrate in overlying water when nitrification in pore water was facilitated and denitrification at the sediment-water interface was inhibited. When the aquatic plants were introduced into the closed-circuit SMFC, the internal ammonium assimilation by aquatic plants was advanced by electrogenesis; nitrification in pore water and denitrification in sediments were also promoted. These processes might result in the maximum decrease of internal nitrogen with low nitrogen levels in the overlying water despite the lower power production. The P-SMFC-c reduced 8.1%, 16.2%, 24.7%, and 25.3% of internal total nitrogen compared to SMFC-o on the 55th, 82th, 136th, and 190th days, respectively. The smaller number of Nitrospira and the larger number of Bacillus and Pseudomonas on the anodes via high throughput sequencing may account for strong mineralization and denitrification in the sediments under closed-circuit. The coupled P-SMFC system has shown good potential for the efficient removal of internal nitrogen. Public Library of Science 2017-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5328281/ /pubmed/28241072 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172757 Text en © 2017 Xu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Xu, Peng
Xiao, En-Rong
Xu, Dan
Zhou, Yin
He, Feng
Liu, Bi-Yun
Zeng, Lei
Wu, Zhen-Bin
Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
title Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
title_full Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
title_fullStr Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
title_full_unstemmed Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
title_short Internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
title_sort internal nitrogen removal from sediments by the hybrid system of microbial fuel cells and submerged aquatic plants
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5328281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28241072
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172757
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