RMIT University
Browse

Sustainable remediation: electrochemically assisted microbial dechlorination of tetrachloroethene-contaminated groundwater

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 14:59 authored by Sayali Patil, Eric Adetutu, Jacqueline Rochow, J Mitchell, Andrew BallAndrew Ball
Microbial electric systems (MESs) hold significant promise for the sustainable remediation of chlorinated solvents such as tetrachlorethene (perchloroethylene, PCE). Although the bio-electrochemical potential of some specific bacterial species such as Dehalcoccoides and Geobacteraceae have been exploited, this ability in other undefined microorganisms has not been extensively assessed. Hence, the focus of this study was to investigate indigenous and potentially bio-electrochemically active microorganisms in PCE-contaminated groundwater. Lab-scale MESs were fed with acetate and carbon electrode/PCE as electron donors and acceptors, respectively, under biostimulation (BS) and BS-bioaugmentation (BS-BA) regimes. Molecular analysis of the indigenous groundwater community identified mainly Spirochaetes, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and γ and δ-Proteobacteria. Environmental scanning electron photomicrographs of the anode surfaces showed extensive indigenous microbial colonization under both regimes. This colonization and BS resulted in 100% dechlorination in both treatments with complete dechlorination occurring 4 weeks earlier in BS-BA samples and up to 11.5μA of current being generated. The indigenous non-Dehalococcoides community was found to contribute significantly to electron transfer with ~61% of the current generated due to their activities. This study therefore shows the potential of the indigenous non-Dehalococcoides bacterial community in bio-electrochemically reducing PCE that could prove to be a cost-effective and sustainable bioremediation practice.

History

Journal

Microbial Biotechnology

Volume

7

Issue

1

Start page

54

End page

63

Total pages

10

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 The Authors

Former Identifier

2006046092

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2014-10-21