Heterogeneous photocatalysis of moxifloxacin at a pilot solar compound parabolic collector: Elimination of the genotoxicity.

J Environ Manage

Universidade Federal Do Rio Grande Do Sul (UFRGS), Programa de Pós-Graduação Em Engenharia de Minas, Metalúrgica e de Materiais (PPGE3M), Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Photocatalysis has shown promise in reducing emerging water pollutants, especially moxifloxacin (MOX), which can cause bacterial resistance and toxicity due to poor wastewater treatment.
  • The study tested a compound parabolic concentrator (CPC) reactor for degrading MOX using both sunlight and UV-A light, achieving approximately 65% degradation with sunlight compared to 44% with artificial light.
  • Post-treatment analysis indicated that sunlight degraded MOX effectively, eliminating its acute toxicity and genotoxic effects, while the transformation products showed no harmful effects on plant seeds and bulbs.

Article Abstract

Photocatalysis has been applied for the elimination or reduction concentration of emerging pollutants in water. One of them, is the moxifloxacin (MOX), a fluoroquinolone that have a potential to develop resistant bacteria and have been present toxicity. The MOX achieves the environment due to inefficient wastewater treatment and incorrect disposal. Aiming to find a sustainable solution for photocatalytic process, compound parabolic concentrator (CPC) reactors have been proposed. In this sense, the present study investigates the application of CPC reactor for the degradation of MOX using sunlight and artificial light (UV-A lamp). In addition, the acute toxicity for L. sativa seeds and A. cepa bulbs, as well as the MOX cytotoxicity and genotoxicity for A. cepa root were investigated before and after treatment. The MOX degradation was around 65% using the sunlight and 44% with the artificial light. This difference was due to the kind of incident radiation (direct and diffuse), as well as the type of radiation (visible and/or ultraviolet) used in the processes. For L. sativa the acute toxicity was eliminated after MOX treatment using sunlight. A. cepa root length increased before the treatment and reduced significantly after it, what can indicate hormesis occurrence. MOX cytotoxicity was not observed. In contrast, genotoxicity assays showed high frequency of chromosomal aberrations for MOX solution, indicating elevated genotoxicity that was eliminated after solar treatment. The transformation products of MOX after CPC reactor solar treatment did not show cytotoxicity and genotoxicity in A. cepa and acute toxicity in L. Sativa. The results indicates that photocatalysis in a CPC solar reactor is efficient for MOX toxicity removal in the treated solutions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113296DOI Listing

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