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A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage

Microbial electrochemical processes have potential to remediate acid mine drainage (AMD) wastewaters which are highly acidic and rich in sulfate and heavy metals, without the need for extensive chemical dosing. In this manuscript, a novel hybrid microbial/electrochemical remediation process which us...

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Autores principales: Brewster, Emma Thompson, Pozo, Guillermo, Batstone, Damien J., Freguia, Stefano, Ledezma, Pablo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9080545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35541131
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra03153c
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author Brewster, Emma Thompson
Pozo, Guillermo
Batstone, Damien J.
Freguia, Stefano
Ledezma, Pablo
author_facet Brewster, Emma Thompson
Pozo, Guillermo
Batstone, Damien J.
Freguia, Stefano
Ledezma, Pablo
author_sort Brewster, Emma Thompson
collection PubMed
description Microbial electrochemical processes have potential to remediate acid mine drainage (AMD) wastewaters which are highly acidic and rich in sulfate and heavy metals, without the need for extensive chemical dosing. In this manuscript, a novel hybrid microbial/electrochemical remediation process which uses a 3-reactor system – a precipitation vessel, an electrochemical reactor and a microbial electrochemical reactor with a sulfate-reducing biocathode – was modelled. To evaluate the long-term operability of this system, a dynamic model for the fluxes of 140 different ionic species was developed and calibrated using laboratory-scale experimental data. The model identified that when the reactors are operating in the desired state, the coulombic efficiency of sulfate removal from AMD is high (91%). Modelling also identified that a periodic electrolyte purge is required to prevent the build-up of Cl(−) ions in the microbial electrochemical reactor. The model furthermore studied the fate of sulfate and carbon in the system. For sulfate, it was found that only 29% can be converted into elemental sulfur, with the rest complexating with metals in the precipitation vessel. Finally, the model shows that the flux of inorganic carbon under the current operational strategy is insufficient to maintain the autotrophic sulfate-reducing biomass. The modelling approach demonstrates that a change in system operational strategies plus close monitoring of overlooked ionic species (such as Cl(−) and HCO(3)(−)) are key towards the scaling-up of this technology.
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spelling pubmed-90805452022-05-09 A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage Brewster, Emma Thompson Pozo, Guillermo Batstone, Damien J. Freguia, Stefano Ledezma, Pablo RSC Adv Chemistry Microbial electrochemical processes have potential to remediate acid mine drainage (AMD) wastewaters which are highly acidic and rich in sulfate and heavy metals, without the need for extensive chemical dosing. In this manuscript, a novel hybrid microbial/electrochemical remediation process which uses a 3-reactor system – a precipitation vessel, an electrochemical reactor and a microbial electrochemical reactor with a sulfate-reducing biocathode – was modelled. To evaluate the long-term operability of this system, a dynamic model for the fluxes of 140 different ionic species was developed and calibrated using laboratory-scale experimental data. The model identified that when the reactors are operating in the desired state, the coulombic efficiency of sulfate removal from AMD is high (91%). Modelling also identified that a periodic electrolyte purge is required to prevent the build-up of Cl(−) ions in the microbial electrochemical reactor. The model furthermore studied the fate of sulfate and carbon in the system. For sulfate, it was found that only 29% can be converted into elemental sulfur, with the rest complexating with metals in the precipitation vessel. Finally, the model shows that the flux of inorganic carbon under the current operational strategy is insufficient to maintain the autotrophic sulfate-reducing biomass. The modelling approach demonstrates that a change in system operational strategies plus close monitoring of overlooked ionic species (such as Cl(−) and HCO(3)(−)) are key towards the scaling-up of this technology. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9080545/ /pubmed/35541131 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra03153c Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Brewster, Emma Thompson
Pozo, Guillermo
Batstone, Damien J.
Freguia, Stefano
Ledezma, Pablo
A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
title A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
title_full A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
title_fullStr A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
title_full_unstemmed A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
title_short A modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
title_sort modelling approach to assess the long-term stability of a novel microbial/electrochemical system for the treatment of acid mine drainage
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9080545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35541131
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra03153c
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