Microalgae-based systems can potentially inactivate E. coli and viruses. In this work, batch algal-bacterial photobioreactors were operated to elucidate the effect of zero-valent iron (ZVI) nanoparticles and light intensity on the reduction of viral RNA (MS2, Phi6 and Bovine coronavirus, BCoV) and uidA gene (E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnaerobic and microalgae-based technologies for municipal wastewater treatment have emerged as sustainable alternatives to activated sludge systems. However, viruses are a major sanitary concern for reuse applications of liquid and solid byproducts from these technologies. To assess their capacity to reduce viruses during secondary wastewater treatment, enveloped Phi6 and nonenveloped MS2 bacteriophages, typically used as surrogates of several types of wastewater viruses, were spiked into batch bioreactors treating synthetic municipal wastewater (SMWW).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are recognized as important sources of Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria (ARBs) and Antibiotic Resistant Genes (ARGs), and might play a role in the removal and dissemination of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in the environment. Detailed information about AMR removal by the different treatment technologies commonly applied in urban WWTPs is needed. This study investigated the occurrence, removal and characterization of ARBs in WWTPs employing different technologies: WWTP-A (conventional activated sludge-CAS), WWTP-B (UASB reactor followed by biological trickling filter) and WWTP-C (modified activated sludge followed by UV disinfection-MAS/UV).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvestigating waterborne viruses is of great importance to minimizing risks to public health. Viruses tend to adsorb to sludge particles from wastewater processes by electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between virus, aquatic matrix, and particle surface. Sludge is often re-used in agriculture; therefore, its evaluation is also of great interest to public health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
May 2022
Wastewater tertiary treatment has been pointed out as an effective alternative for reducing the concentration of antibiotic resistant bacteria and genes (ARB and ARGs) in wastewaters. The present work aimed to build on the current knowledge about the effects of activated sludge and UV irradiation on antibiotic resistance determinants in biologically treated wastewaters. For that, the microbial community and ARGs' composition of samples collected after preliminary (APT), secondary (AST), and tertiary (ATT) treatments in a full-scale wastewater treatment plant using a modified activated sludge (MAS) system followed by an UV stage (16 mJ/cm) were investigated through culture-dependent and independent approaches (including metagenomics).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe performance of an anoxic-aerobic microalgal-bacterial system treating synthetic food waste digestate at 10 days of hydraulic retention time via nitrification-denitrification under increasing digestate concentrations of 25%, 50%, and 100% (v/v) was assessed during Stages I, II and III, respectively. The system supported adequate treatment without external CO supplementation since sufficient inorganic carbon in the digestate was available for autotrophic growth. High steady-state Total Organic Carbon (TOC) and Total Nitrogen (TN) removal efficiencies of 85-96% and 73-84% were achieved in Stages I and II.
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