Issue 105, 2015

Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium as an electron sink during cathodic denitrification

Abstract

Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) is an undesired pathway occurring simultaneously to denitrification in natural environments as well as engineered systems aimed at biological nitrate reduction/removal. Ammonium formation has previously been detected in cathodic compartments of bioelectrochemical systems performing denitrification, although reported concentrations are generally very low. In order to demonstrate and quantify the occurrence of DNRA from nitrate in a mixed culture denitrifying cathodic biofilm, a carbon cloth working electrode was inoculated with a denitrifying microbial community and poised at −0.9 V vs. standard hydrogen electrode, while nitrate (20 mg L−1 NO3-N) was continuously fed at an HRT of 10 hours. Results showed that more than 40% of nitrogen added as nitrate was converted via DNRA when the biofilm was at initial stages of development. However, ammonium generation decreased to approximately 5% at later stages of development (7 months of operation), indicating that biofilm age plays a key role on biological pathways occurring during cathodic nitrate reduction. A closer insight revealed that the occurrence of DNRA is linked to cathodic coulombic efficiency: at low efficiency, a large fraction of the incoming electrons are converted to hydrogen or other reduced compounds within the biofilm, increasing the driving force for DNRA; at high coulombic efficiency, lower reducing power availability leads to nitrogen gas as preferred reduction product.

Graphical abstract: Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium as an electron sink during cathodic denitrification

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Sep 2015
Accepted
06 Oct 2015
First published
08 Oct 2015

RSC Adv., 2015,5, 86572-86577

Dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium as an electron sink during cathodic denitrification

E. M. Sander, B. Virdis and S. Freguia, RSC Adv., 2015, 5, 86572 DOI: 10.1039/C5RA19241B

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