Harnessing microbially mediated redox processes for sustainable water treatment

Lead Research Organisation: Newcastle University
Department Name: Sch of Engineering

Abstract

With the international community under considerable pressure to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as part of climate change mitigation strategies, the development of low carbon footprint, sustainable technologies is critical to humanity's adaptation to our changing climate. Given the UN's Sustainable Development Goal 6 (SDG6), which aims to achieve universal access to safe and affordable drinking water for all by 2030, the need for low cost and sustainable global wastewater treatment systems, has rapidly become more urgent.

This project will use an interdisciplinary approach, exploiting the natural interaction of iron-rich sedimentary minerals with indigenous microbial communities, to treat wastewater via a novel advanced oxidation process (AOP) and remove target organic pollutants, at very low cost. Although these coupled biogeochemical processes can occur in isolation in the laboratory, it is not yet clear whether this potentially dynamic system is able to self-regenerate and therefore perform effective treatment of water pollutants over several oxidation-reduction (redox) cycles and under realistic environmental conditions. This project aims to address these knowledge gaps, by:

a) monitoring the treatment performance over several cycles of treatment and regeneration at mesocosm scale, using only water flow and column saturation for stimulating reducing environments and oxidation;

b) investigating the naturally present microbial communities that drive iron reduction during regeneration periods, their evolution over several treatment cycles, and how this affects treatment efficiency;

c) examining whether and how network ecology tools and geochemical parameters can be used to evaluate the performance of this sustainable wastewater treatment system.

To provide the proof of concept for this wastewater treatment system, laboratory mesocosm experiments will be undertaken using different combinations of iron-rich clay minerals and redox-active sediments (including in-situ indigenous microbiology) to treat selected organic pollutants. Water flow and oxygen saturation will be adjusted over time to stimulate successive redox cycles that would occur in the natural environment. Collection of time-series data sets on contaminant degradation, changes in mineralogy and microbial communities will allow for assessing how the in-situ microbiology of the system affects the performance of, and is affected by, the treatment process. Applying a combination of geochemical, engineering, microbiological and ecological methods to understand the interactions and underpinning processes in the mesocosm experiments will be crucial for further developing this novel water treatment technology at scale.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/R51309X/1 01/10/2018 30/09/2023
2281090 Studentship EP/R51309X/1 01/10/2019 30/07/2023 Maggie White
 
Description To date, this work has shown that clay minerals containing iron can catalyse a sustainable 'Advanced Oxidation Process', which will degrade a common wastewater contaminant within dynamic, bench-top flow experiments, which are being used to simulate a real water treatment scenario. The sustainability and efficiency of this water treatment process is currently being investigated within a number of test experiments, alongside the role and structure of natural microbial communities that play a key role in this low-carbon-footprint technology.
Exploitation Route Outcomes of this funding could be used:
(1) to raise showcase successes of sustainable water treatment options whilst raising impact and awareness within the water and wastewater industries;
(2) as evidence to support the case for further R&D into sustainable water treatment processes, including funding field trials at real wastewater treatment sites to gauge realistic feasibility;
(3) to inform policy and guidance surrounding sustainable and low-carbon water treatment methods relevant to the water and wastewater industries.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink,Chemicals,Energy,Environment,Healthcare

 
Description The Clay Minerals Society 2020 Student Travel Grant Application
Amount $1,500 (USD)
Organisation The Clay Minerals Society 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United States
Start 07/2020 
End 10/2021