Magnetically separable laccase-biochar composite enable highly efficient adsorption-degradation of quinolone antibiotics: Immobilization, removal performance and mechanisms

The tremendous potential of hybrid technologies for the elimination of quinolone antibiotics has recently attracted considerable attention. This current work prepared a magnetically modified biochar (MBC) immobilized laccase product named LC-MBC through response surface methodology (RSM), and LC-MBC...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2023-06, Vol.879, p.163057-163057, Article 163057
Hauptverfasser: Zou, Mengyuan, Tian, Weijun, Chu, Meile, Lu, Zhiyang, Liu, Bingkun, Xu, Dongpo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The tremendous potential of hybrid technologies for the elimination of quinolone antibiotics has recently attracted considerable attention. This current work prepared a magnetically modified biochar (MBC) immobilized laccase product named LC-MBC through response surface methodology (RSM), and LC-MBC showed an excellent capacity in the removal of norfloxacin (NOR), enrofloxacin (ENR) and moxifloxacin (MFX) from aqueous solution. The superior pH, thermal, storage and operational stability demonstrated by LC-MBC revealed its potential for sustainable application. The removal efficiencies of LC-MBC in the presence of 1 mM 2,2′-azino-bis (3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS) for NOR, ENR and MFX were 93.7 %, 65.4 % and 77.0 % at pH 4 and 40 °C after 48 h reaction, respectively, which were 1.2, 1.3 and 1.3 times higher than those of MBC under the same conditions. The synergistic effect of adsorption by MBC and degradation by laccase dominated the removal of quinolone antibiotics by LC-MBC. Pore-filling, electrostatic, hydrophobic, π-π interactions, surface complexation and hydrogen bonding contributed in the adsorption process. The attacks on the quinolone core and piperazine moiety were involved in the degradation process. This study underscored the possibility of immobilization of laccase on biochar for enhanced remediation of quinolone antibiotics-contaminated wastewater. The proposed physical adsorption-biodegradation system (LC-MBC–ABTS) provided a novel perspective for the efficient and sustainable removal of antibiotics in actual wastewater through combined multi-methods. [Display omitted] •Removal rates for three quinolones were 37.6 %–59.8 % by MBC and 65.4 %–93.7 % by LC-MBC.•LC-MBC exhibited better pH, thermal and storage stability than free laccase.•Redox mediator ABTS led to the highest degradation efficiencies for NOR, ENR and MFX.•Synergistic effect of adsorption and degradation resulted in remarkably high removal.•Compounds oxidation involved the destruction of quinolone core and piperazine moiety.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.163057