Development of a flow-cell bioreactor for immobilized sulfidogenic sludge characterization using electrochemical H2S microsensors.
Chemosphere
; 358: 141959, 2024 Jun.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38608772
ABSTRACT
The sulfate-reduction process plays a crucial role in the biological valorization of SOx gases. However, a complete understanding of the sulfidogenic process in bioreactors is limited by the lack of technologies for characterizing the sulfate-reducing activity of immobilized biomass. In this work, we propose a flow-cell bioreactor (FCB) for characterizing sulfate-reducing biomass using H2S microsensors to monitor H2S production in real-time within a biofilm. To replace natural immobilization through extracellular polymeric substance production, sulfidogenic sludge was artificially immobilized using polymers. Physical and sulfate-reducing activity studies were performed to select a polymer-biomass matrix that maintained sulfate-reducing activity of biomass while providing strong microbial retention and mechanical strength. Several operational conditions of the sulfidogenic reactor allowed to obtain a H2S profiles under different inlet sulfate loads and, additionally, 3D mapping was assessed in order to perform a hydraulic characterization. Besides, the effects of artificial immobilization on biodiversity were investigated through the characterization of microbial communities. This study demonstrated the appropriateness of immobilized-biomass for characterization of sulfidogenic biomass in FCB using H2S electrochemical microsensors, and beneficial microbiological communities shifts as well as enrichment of sulfate-reducing bacteria have been confirmed.
Key words
Full text:
1
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Sewage
/
Sulfates
/
Bioreactors
/
Hydrogen Sulfide
Language:
En
Journal:
Chemosphere
Year:
2024
Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Spain