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J Hazard Mater ; 384: 121271, 2020 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31611021

ABSTRACT

Land spreading of sewage sludge is a major source of environmental microplastics (MPs) contamination. However, conventional sludge treatments are inefficient at removing sludge-based MPs. Herein, hyperthermophilic composting (hTC) technology is proposed and demonstrated in full-scale (200 t) for in situ biodegradation of sludge-based MPs. After 45 days of hTC treatment, 43.7% of the MPs was removed from the sewage sludge, which is the highest value ever reported for MPs biodegradation. The underlying mechanisms of MPs removal were investigated in lab-scale polystyrene-microplastics (PS-MPs) biodegradation experiments. The hTC inoculum degraded 7.3% of the PS-MPs at 70 °C in 56 days, which was about 6.6 times higher than that of the conventional thermophilic composting (cTC) inoculum at 40 °C. Analyses of the molecular weight and physicochemical properties of the PS-MPs residuals indicated that hyperthermophilic bacteria in hTC accelerated PS-MPs biodegradation through excellent bio-oxidation performance. High-throughput sequencing suggested that Thermus, Bacillus, and Geobacillus were the dominant bacteria responsible for the highly efficient biodegradation during hTC. These results reveal the critical role of hyperthermophilic bacteria in MPs biodegradation during hTC, highlighting a promising strategy for sludge-based MPs removal from the real environment.


Subject(s)
Composting/methods , Microplastics/metabolism , Sewage/microbiology , Bacillus/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental , Geobacillus/metabolism , Thermus/metabolism
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