Sequential reduction/oxidation of azo dyes in a three-dimensional biofilm electrode reactor.

Chemosphere

School of Environment, Beijing Key Laboratory for Emerging Organic Contaminants Control, State Key Joint Laboratory of Environmental Simulation and Pollution Control, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China.

Published: November 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • A new 3D biofilm electrode reactor (3D-BER) combines anaerobic and aerobic processes to effectively degrade the azo dye reactive brilliant red X-3B (RBRX-3B).
  • In the reactor, the bottom region promotes anaerobic conditions to reduce azo dyes, while the top region allows aerobic conditions for mineralizing dye intermediates, enhancing the overall treatment efficiency.
  • The process significantly improves decolorization rates, reduces toxicity in the effluent, and positions 3D-BER as a promising solution for treating dyeing wastewater.

Article Abstract

By combining sequential anaerobic-aerobic reactor and penetrable cathode-anode operation, a novel anaerobic/aerobic sequencing three-dimensional biofilm electrode reactor (3D-BER) was developed to evaluate the degradation of azo dye reactive brilliant red X-3B (RBRX-3B). In the bottom cathodic region, anaerobic reductive conditions and H were produced for the bioreduction of azo dyes; in the top anodic region, aerobic oxidative conditions and O were produced for the mineralization of dye intermediates. Due to the supply of electrical power, electrons could be mediated via electrolysis of water or directly transfer between electrodes and microbe cells. The biofilm immobilized on the surface of the cathode utilized electrode or H as electron donors and accelerated the rate of RBRX-3B reduction, and the decolorization rate was significantly increased 2.6-3.7 fold, reaching at 2.52-3.39 mol/m/d at an energy consumption of 0.15 kWh/mol RBRX-3B. RBRX-3B was reductively cleaved into aromatic amines at the biocathode and these amines were effectively removed at the bioanode. Acute toxicity tests showed that the intermediates of RBRX-3B were more toxic when compared with the initial influent, and the 3D-BER effluent exhibited much lower toxicity (5% inhibition of bioluminescence of Vibrio fisheri) than the electrochemical and biological effluent (65% and 30% inhibition, respectively). These findings suggest the novel 3D-BER may provide a promising alternative to remove azo dyes in dyeing wastewater.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.08.001DOI Listing

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