Enhancement of waterborne pathogen removal by functionalized biochar with ε-polylysine ″dynamic arms″: Potential application in ultrafiltration system

•Biochar with PLL foldability enhances pathogen capture/desorption/inactivation.•Pathogen interception sites transfer from membrane pores/surface to biochar.•Membrane fouling mitigation and permeate quality improvement are achieved.•Electrostatic effect/pore filling/chemical bonding facilitate bioch...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water research (Oxford) 2024-08, Vol.259, p.121834, Article 121834
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Rourou, Ding, An, Cai, Xuejun, Bai, Langming, Li, Guibai, Liang, Heng, Tang, Chuyang Y.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Biochar with PLL foldability enhances pathogen capture/desorption/inactivation.•Pathogen interception sites transfer from membrane pores/surface to biochar.•Membrane fouling mitigation and permeate quality improvement are achieved.•Electrostatic effect/pore filling/chemical bonding facilitate biochar adsorption.•Conformational transition of PLL respond to the pH of solution environment. Widespread outbreaks of threatening infections caused by unknown pathogens and water transmission have spawned the development of adsorption methods for pathogen elimination. We proposed a biochar functionalization strategy involving ε-polylysine (PLL), a bio-macromolecular poly(amino acid)s with variable folding conformations, as a "pathogen gripper" on biochar. PLL was successfully bridged onto biochar via polydopamine (PDA) crosslinking. The extension of electropositive side chains within PLL enables the capture of both nanoscale viruses and micrometer-scale bacteria in water, achieving excellent removal performances. This functionalized biochar was tentatively incorporated into ultrafiltration (UF) system, to achieve effective and controllable adsorption and retention of pathogens, and to realize the transfer of pathogens from membrane surface/pore to biochar surface as well as flushing water. The biochar-amended UF systems presents complete retention (∼7 LRV) and hydraulic elution of pathogens into membrane flushing water. Improvements in removal of organics and anti-fouling capability were observed, indicating the broken trade-off in UF pathogen removal dependent on irreversible fouling. Chemical characterizations revealed adsorption mechanisms encompassing electrostatic/hydrophobic interactions, pore filling, electron transfer, chemical bonding and secondary structure transitions. Microscopic and mechanical analyses validated the mechanisms for rapid adsorption and pathogen lysis. Low-concentration alkaline solution for used biochar regeneration, facilitated the deprotonation and transformation of PLL side chain to folded structures (α-helix/β-sheet). Biochar regeneration process also promoted the effective detachment/inactivation of pathogens and protection of functional groups on biochar, corroborated by physicochemical inspection and molecular dynamics simulation. The foldability of poly(amino acid)s acting like dynamic arms, significantly contributed to pathogen capture/desorption/inactivation and biochar regeneration. This study also inspires future investigati
ISSN:0043-1354
1879-2448
1879-2448
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2024.121834