Anaerobic cyanides oxidation with bimetallic modulation of biological toxicity and activity for nitrite reduction
Cyanide is a typical toxic reducing agent prevailing in wastewater with a well-defined chemical mechanism, whereas its exploitation as an electron donor by microorganisms is currently understudied. Given that conventional denitrification requires additional electron donors, the cyanide and nitrogen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of hazardous materials 2024-07, Vol.472, p.134540-134540, Article 134540 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cyanide is a typical toxic reducing agent prevailing in wastewater with a well-defined chemical mechanism, whereas its exploitation as an electron donor by microorganisms is currently understudied. Given that conventional denitrification requires additional electron donors, the cyanide and nitrogen can be eliminated simultaneously if the reducing HCN/CN− and its complexes are used as inorganic electron donors. Hence, this paper proposes anaerobic cyanides oxidation for nitrite reduction, whereby the biological toxicity and activity of cyanides are modulated by bimetallics. Performance tests illustrated that low toxicity equivalents of iron-copper composite cyanides provided higher denitrification loads with the release of cyanide ions and electrons from the complex structure by the bimetal. Both isotopic labeling and Density Functional Theory (DFT) demonstrated that CN−-N supplied electrons for nitrite reduction. The superposition of chemical processes reduces the biotoxicity and enhances the biological activity of cyanides in the CN−/Fe3+/Cu2+/NO2– coexistence system, including complex detoxification of CN− by Fe3+, CN− release by Cu2+ from [Fe(CN)6]3−, and NO release by nitrite substitution of −CN groups. Cyanide is the smallest structural unit of C/N-containing compounds and serves as a probe to extend the electron-donating principle of anaerobic cyanides oxidation to more electron-donor microbial utilization.
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•A novel anaerobic cyanides oxidation and its metabolic pathway were found.•Complex detoxification of coexisting systems facilitates cyanide metabolisms.•Bimetallic modulation promotes the cyanide detoxification and electron release.•The probing role of cyanides reveals the bioavailability of N-containing compounds. |
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ISSN: | 0304-3894 1873-3336 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.134540 |