Scholarship & Research

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/1

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Assessing a novel approach to pharmaceutical removal from wastewater: aerobic granular sludge
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Engineering, 2024) Bodle, Kylie Brigitta; Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Catherine Kirkland; This is a manuscript style paper that includes co-authored chapters.
    Pharmaceutical concentrations in various environmental matrices are increasing across the globe. Effluent discharge from wastewater treatment plants is a major vector by which pharmaceuticals enter the environment, as many of these compounds are not biodegradable under conventional wastewater treatment conditions. Although concentrations are currently low (ng/L to ?g/L levels), pharmaceutical contamination poses risks to both human and animal health, as many pharmaceuticals can have toxic effects on fish, birds, and small mammals, as well as contribute to the proliferation of antibiotic resistance genes in bacteria. Aerobic granular sludge (AGS), an emerging biofilm-based wastewater treatment biotechnology and the subject of this dissertation, may be capable of enhancing pharmaceutical removal from wastewater. Scientific literature indicates that AGS uses a mixture of both biodegradation and adsorption to remove pharmaceuticals, but thus far, studies on this topic are limited. The research detailed herein investigated how AGS was affected by a mixture of three common, but relatively unstudied, pharmaceuticals: diclofenac (anti-inflammatory), erythromycin (antibiotic), and gemfibrozil (lipid regulator). Studies described herein examined how AGS grown in two different environments--the lab versus a full-scale wastewater treatment plant--responded to pharmaceuticals. Pharmaceutical effects on wastewater treatment efficacy, active microbial populations, and biofilm structures were investigated. Pharmaceutical fates in both the aqueous and solid phases were also tracked. In general, lab-grown AGS was more negatively impacted by pharmaceutical exposure, evidenced by reduced wastewater treatment efficacy, declines in key wastewater-treating microbial populations, and reductions in biofilm lipid content. Pharmaceuticals were also poorly removed by lab-grown granules. In contrast, key microbial populations and biofilm structures remained stable throughout dosing in environmentally-grown AGS, and gemfibrozil was completely biodegraded. An important caveat to comparison of the two studies, however, is that the pharmaceutical dose to lab-grown AGS was approximately double that to environmental granules. Altogether, the research described herein demonstrates the promise of AGS as a dual wastewater and pharmaceutical treatment technology, but illustrates the importance of conducting experiments under conditions as environmentally relevant as possible.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation: meso-scale optimization and micro-scale characterization
    (Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Engineering, 2020) Zambare, Neerja Milind; Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Robin Gerlach and Ellen G. Lauchnor (co-chair); Ellen Lauchnor and Robin Gerlach were co-authors of the article, 'Controlling the distribution of microbially precipitated calcium carbonate in radial flow environments' in the journal 'Environmental science and technology' which is contained within this dissertation.; Robin Gerlach and Ellen Lauchnor were co-authors of the article, 'Spatio-temporal dynamics of strontium partitioning with microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation in porous media flow cells' submitted to the journal 'Environmental science & technology' which is contained within this dissertation.; Robin Gerlach and Ellen Lauchnor were co-authors of the article, 'Co-precipitation of strontium and barium' submitted to the journal 'Environmental science & technology' which is contained within this dissertation.; Nada Naser, Robin Gerlach and Connie Chang were co-authors of the article, 'Visualizing microbially induced mineral precipitation from single cells using drop-based microfluidics' submitted to the journal 'Nature methods' which is contained within this dissertation.
    Microorganisms have the potential to impact processes on a scale orders of magnitude larger than their size. For example, microbe-mineral interactions at the micro-scale can drive macro-scale processes such as rock formation and weathering. Many bioremediation technologies derive inspiration from microbial mineralization processes. Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICP) can produce calcium carbonate (CaCO 3) precipitates which can be utilized as a biological cement to strengthen porous media by reducing fluid permeability in subsurface fractures or as an immobilization matrix to remove metal contaminants dissolved in groundwater. To make MICP a feasible and successful bioremediation technology in the world outside the lab, it is necessary to bridge the gap between the meso-scale research studies and macro-scale applications. This thesis focuses on such meso-scale studies but also contributes to bridging the gap in the other direction, i.e., meso-scale to micro-scale to gain a fundamental understanding of the cellular level processes behind MICP. The research presented here investigates two applications of MICP with a focus on controlling precipitate distribution and process efficiency in target environments. Subsurface precipitate distribution and metal partitioning during MICP were studied in novel reactive transport systems that mimic application-environment conditions. A radial flow reactor was used to study the spatial distribution of precipitates in conditions similar to subsurface injection well environments. The distribution and degree of metal partitioning during MICP was investigated in batch reactors and porous media flow cells to study kinetics and reactive transport effects on kinetics. In the radial flow environment, more precipitates formed away from the center injection zone. Results showed that longer reactant residence times and an equimolar ratio of calcium to urea were able to maximize precipitation efficiency. Metal partitioning could be maximized at low reactant flow rates and low metal concentrations. The novel flow cell set up used revealed a spatial decoupling between ureolysis and precipitation. A micro-scale investigation of the fundamental MICP process itself is presented wherein microbe-mineral interactions are observed at the cell level. A semi-correlative approach to investigating individual precipitates in microdroplets is presented, using a multitude of microscopy and microanalysis techniques. The presented studies capture MICP across a range of scales.
Copyright (c) 2002-2022, LYRASIS. All rights reserved.