Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Impact of synthetic silver nanoparticles on the biofilm microbial communities and wastewater treatment efficiency in experimental hybrid filter system treating municipal wastewater

11

Citations

70

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) threaten human and ecosystem health, and are among the most widely used engineered nanomaterials that reach wastewater during production, usage, and disposal phases. This study evaluated the effect of a 100-fold increase in collargol (protein-coated AgNP) and Ag<sup>+</sup> ions concentrations in municipal wastewater on the microbial community composition of the filter material biofilms (FMB) and the purification efficiency of the hybrid treatment system consisting of vertical (VF) and horizontal (HF) subsurface flow filters. We found that increased amounts of collargol and AgNO<sub>3</sub> in wastewater had a modest effect on the prokaryotic community composition in FMB and did not significantly affect the performance of the studied system. Regardless of how Ag was introduced, 99.9% of it was removed by the system. AgNPs and AgNO<sub>3</sub> concentrations did not significantly affect the purification efficiency of the system. AgNO<sub>3</sub> induced a higher increase in the genetic potential of certain Ag resistance mechanisms in VFs than collargol; however, the increase in Ag resistance potential was similar for both substances in HF. Hence, the microbial community composition in biofilms of vertical and horizontal flow filters is largely resistant, resilient, or functionally redundant in response to AgNPs addition in the form of collargol.

References

YearCitations

Page 1