Removal and biotransformation pathway of antibiotic Sulfamethoxazole from municipal wastewater treatment by anaerobic membrane bioreactor

Publication date: Available online 13 July 2019Source: Journal of Hazardous MaterialsAuthor(s): Chun-Hai Wei, Claudia Sanchez-Huerta, TorOve Leiknes, Gary Amy, Hong Zhou, Xiaodong Hu, Qian Fang, Hongwei RongAbstractA lab-scale mesophilic anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR) was used to treat synthetic municipal wastewater with variable concentrations of antibiotic Sulfamethoxazole (SMX) and bulk organics in this study. The removal and biotransformation pathway of SMX in the AnMBR were systematically investigated during a 170 d of operation under hydraulic retention time of 1 d. Average SMX removal was 97.1% under feed SMX of 10-1000 µg/L, decreasing to 91.6 and 88.0% under feed SMX of 10000 and 100000 µg/L due to the inhibition effects of high SMX loading rate on anaerobic microorganisms. SMX biotransformation followed pseudo-first order reaction kinetics based on SMX removal independent of feed SMX of 10-1000 µg/L during continuous operation and also in a batch test under initial SMX of 100000 µg/L. According to the identified 7 transformation products (TPs) by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, the biotransformation pathway of SMX from municipal wastewater treatment via AnMBR was first proposed to consist of 2 primary routes: 1) Butylbenzenesulfonamide without antibiotic toxicity dominated under feed SMX of 10-100 µg/L; 2) Sulfanilamide with much lower antibiotic toxicity than SMX dominated under feed SMX of 1000-100000 µg/L, further transforming to secondary TPs ...
Source: Journal of Hazardous Materials - Category: Environmental Health Source Type: research