The bioreactor was operated for 60 days in a continuous mode during which the effect of different parameters such as HRT, peptone concentration and loading rate on the removal of 4-CP studied. The bioreactor showed an excellent removal efficiency of 4-CP during continuous operation.
Before the commencement of the continuous operation, the reactor was operated without inoculation to check the abiotic loss of the 4-CP due to evaporation. The bioreactor was filled with MSM containing 40 mg/L of 4-CP for 1 day, and the air flow was set to 4 LPM. At these conditions, 2–3 % loss due to evaporation by air flow was observed which is negligible as compared to biodegradation.
The bioreactor was filled with 12 L MSM containing 20 mg/L of 4CP and inoculated with 10 % (v/v) mixed consortium. The bioreactor was operated in the fed-batch mode before the continuous study to acclimatize the biomass. The 4-CP was added to bioreactor periodically to maintain the 20 mg/L concentration. This acclimatization process was performed for one week and afterwards the continuous operation was started.
Effect of peptone
The effect of peptone on the removal of 4-CP in ALR was studied throughout the operation at different operating conditions. The bioreactor was started with 1 g/L peptone with HRT of 40 h. The effect of peptone in the removal of 4-CP by ALR is presented in Figs. 2 and 3. The bioreactor showed 99 % removal of 20 mg/L of initial 4-CP present in the influent. However, upon increasing the initial 4-CP concentration to 40 mg/L, the removal efficiency was decreased to around 80 % at 40 h HRT. At this condition, when HRT was reduced to 30 h, the removal efficiency was decreased to around 50 % and got stabled at 60 % with 1 g/L peptone. The reduction in removal efficiency can be explained by two possible reasons. First, at lower HRT, dilution rate was increased which leads to washout and reduction of biomass concentration in the medium. Second, at lower HRT, peptone loading rate was increased leading to decreased level of competent biomass in the medium.
On 15th day of the operation, the peptone concentration was decreased to 0.5 g/L in the influent by keeping initial 4-CP concentration at 40 mg/L and HRT at 30 h (Fig. 2). The bioreactor showed an increase in removal efficiency from 60 to 76 % in the presence of low peptone concentration at steady-state condition. On 27th day of the operation, the peptone concentration was further decreased to 0.2 g/L in the influent. The HRT was set to 48 h and 4-CP concentration in the influent was increased gradually at this condition. The bioreactor had shown complete removal of 40 mg/L 4-CP. The bioreactor performance had greatly increased in the presence of 0.2 g/L peptone. Even the bioreactor was able to remove up to 400 mg/L of 4-CP in the influent with greater than 98 % removal efficiency. It was observed that the biomass concentration in the medium significantly increased at lower peptone concentration. The result indicates that the mixed consortium can utilize the 4-CP as a carbon source with complete mineralization.
The presence of higher concentration of peptone interferes with the degradation of 4-CP by the mixed consortium. However, at low peptone concentration, the removal efficiency increased but some peptone was found to be necessary to maintain the removal efficiency. Same results were obtained in batch studies which also showed that the presence of 0.2 g/L of peptone improves the degradation efficiency compared to the absence of peptone. This can be concluded as the peptone served as a nitrogen source to the mixed consortium as it was used during the acclimatization period. Also, the peptone did not contribute to biomass growth as evidenced by the result that the biomass increases with the decrease in peptone concentration and increase in 4-CP concentration. Thus, it could be concluded that the mixed consortium utilized the 4-CP as a carbon source. Table 1 summarizes the effect of peptone on the removal rate of 4-CP by the mixed consortium.
Table 1 Effect of peptone concentration on 4-CP removal by ALR
A specific group of microorganism in the mixed consortium was responsible for the degradation of 4-CP. Sahinkaya and Dilek (2006) studied the effect of peptone on the degradation of 4-CP in sequencing batch reactor using a mixed microbial consortium and reported that competent biomass (specialist) is responsible for 4-CP degradation and so the specific degradation rate of 4-CP increases with decreasing peptone concentration as the fraction of competent biomass increases in the mixed consortium (Sahinkaya and Dilek 2006). There are several reports on the degradation of chlorophenols in the presence of other carbon and nitrogen source such as glucose, dextrose, peptone, and yeast extract. The presence of secondary carbon and nitrogen source witnessed an increase in the degradation of chlorophenols (Sahinkaya and Dilek 2006; Murialdo et al. 2003; Shen et al. 2005; Kim et al. 2002; Wang and Loh 1999). However, there are others reports that publicized the opposing outcomes that sometimes the degradation of higher chlorophenols were inhibited (Durruty et al. 2011; Alexander 1999). Shen et al. (2005) had described the beneficial nature of the presence of a suitable quantity of microbial easily degradable substrate for stimulating the process of dechlorination and degradation of chlorophenols (Shen et al. 2005).
Effect of substrate concentration
Effect of initial 4-CP concentration on the removal efficiency of bioreactor was studied by keeping the HRT (48 ± 1 h) and peptone concentration (0.2 g/L) constant and gradually increasing 4-CP concentration. The bioreactor showed greater than 99 % removal efficiency when the initial 4-CP concentration was increased from 20 to 400 mg/L. The effect of initial substrate concentration on biodegradation is shown in Fig. 3 (Day 27–47). After 150 mg/L, the 4-CP concentration was increased at a fast rate (150–400 mg/L) to check the bioreactor stability for shock loads. The bioreactor has shown great stability and removal efficiency even during the shock loads. At lower concentration of 4-CP, complete mineralization was observed with no traces of the intermediate compounds. However, at higher concentration (above 250 mg/L), the trace amount of 5-chloro 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde (5-CHMS) has been observed. The 5-CHMS (λ
max = 380 nm) is the meta-cleavage product of the 4-chlorocatechol that gives a characteristic yellow color in the medium. The bioreactor medium was turned to light yellow color when 4-CP concentration was increased to 400 mg/L due to the accumulation of 5-CHMS. Also, the biomass concentration in the medium was observed to increase with increasing 4-CP concentration. These results indicate that the microorganisms were able to utilize the 4-CP as a sole carbon source.
Effect of HRT
Effect of HRT on the removal of 4-CP by ALR has been studied from days 47 to 60. The peptone and initial 4-CP concentration was kept constant at 0.2 and 400 g/L, respectively. The change in the biodegradation of 4-CP at different HRT is shown in Fig. 3. When the HRT was gradually decreased from 48 to 24 h, no abrupt change in the removal efficiency has been observed. The bioreactor showed greater than 99 % removal of 4-CP at 24 h HRT. The presence of 5-CHMS was not observed in the effluent at higher HRT. However, further decrease in HRT to 18 h leads to drastic decrease in biodegradation rate to 50 %. At 18 h HRT, biomass concentration in the bioreactor medium was suddenly decreased as washout occurs and biomass growth rate was decreased. Also, the bioreactor medium has been found to turn into light brown color and 4-CP concentration in the effluent increases suddenly. Effect of different HRT on the volumetric removal rate of 4-CP (400 mg/L) is shown in Fig. 4. The HRT was again increased stepwise to 24 and 30 h to regain the biodegradation capacity of the reactor. The bioreactor takes some time to recover full degradation efficiency. At 24 h HRT, there was a slight increase in biodegradation rate observed. The biodegradation rate was gradually increased to 66 % at steady state when HRT was increased to 30 h. With time and increase in HRT, the bioreactor had showed to regain biodegradation capacity once again. Table 2 summarizes the change in volumetric removal rate with HRT and initial substrate concentration.
Table 2 Removal of 4-CP by ALR in the presence of 0.2 g/L peptone
The relationship between volumetric loading rate and volumetric removal rate is depicted in Fig. 5. The removal rate was increased exponentially with loading rate up to 16.67 mg/L/h, where 16.59 mg/L/h volumetric removal rate was observed. However, when loading rate was increased to 22.25 mg/L/h, there was a drastic reduction in volumetric removal rate observed as shown in Fig. 5. So, for achieving maximum or greater than 98 % removal rate, the HRT should be kept at 24 h and loading rate at 16.67 mg/L/h. Kargi and konya (2007) studied the effect of HRT on the removal of 4-CP in activated sludge unit. They have reported volumetric removal rate in the range of 360–720 mg/L/day with high COD for different HRT of 5–15 h. After 15 h of HRT, there was no significant increase in the removal rate observed (Kargi and Konya 2007). In another study, it was reported that degradation of 4-CP was decreased with a decrease in HRT in UASB. The UASB had shown 90.1, 88.3, 84.6, and 83 % degradation of 4-CP at 16, 12, 8, and 6 h, respectively (Majumder and Gupta 2008). Table 3 shows the performance of different bioreactors for removal of chlorophenols where most of the studies had shown the removal of 4-CP below 200 mg/L of loading rate. Kargi and Konya (2007) had shown the removal of 4-CP up to 800 mg/L of loading rate with 90 % efficiency (Kargi and Konya 2007). In the present study, the bioreactor had achieved 99.8 % removal for higher loading rate of 400 mg/L/day. The performance of the ALR for removal of 4-CP is prominent and can successfully applied for contaminated wastewater treatment.
Table 3 Biodegradation of chlorophenols using different bioreactors
Metabolites
During the biodegradation of 4-CP by airlift inner loop reactor, the spectroscopic and HPLC analysis indicates the presence of 5-CHMS in the effluent. At lower 4-CP concentration, no metabolites had been detected in the effluent. However, at higher 4-CP concentration, the presence of 5-CHMS (λ
max = 380 nm) was detected. This was also evidenced by the appearance of light yellow color in the reactor medium. 5-CHMS is the meta-cleavage product of the 4-chlorocatechol, the first intermediate of the 4-CP degradation pathway. When 4-CP concentration is above 300 mg/L, the calorimetric assay of the effluent sample shows the presence of 4-chlorocatechol. The presence of metabolites showed that the mixed consortium follows the meta-cleavage pathway for 4-CP biodegradation. There were no other metabolites detected in the effluent. These results were also confirmed in the batch study. The degradation of 4-CP via meta-cleavage pathway by the mixed consortium has been reported (Farrell and Quilty 1999; El-Sayed et al. 2009).
Single bacterial strain can degrade toxic compounds completely if provided the feasible environment and presence of primary growth substrate. However, sometimes pure strain does not possess or express all the enzymes required for complete mineralization of toxic compounds. They specifically express the enzymes that act on parent compounds and produce the intermediate metabolites. These intermediate metabolites remain in the medium unutilized, because the lack of enzymes requires in the metabolic pathway. Also, application of pure strains for in situ environment is impractical as the dominance of other strains over the special strains that are better fitted for the degradation of target compound. In nature or engineered system, microbial communities are responsible for the complete mineralization of the toxic compounds. The several species present act together in a coordinated way within the microbial community that leads to complete degradation of recalcitrant compounds. Also, mixed microbial consortium does not require the presence of other primary growth substrate such as phenol or carbon source for complete degradation or induction of enzymes for the transformation of target toxic compound. A better understanding of the role that microorganisms play in the biodegradation and removal of chlorophenol compounds from the environment could facilitate further research for effective implementation of bioremediation technologies for the contaminated sites. Specific treatment proficiency can enable removal of chlorophenols from the environment and subsequently their ecotoxicological effects.