Influential mechanism of water occurrence states of waste-activated sludge: Over-focused significance of cell lysis to bound water reduction

Water Res. 2022 Aug 1:221:118737. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.118737. Epub 2022 Jun 11.

Abstract

The rigid cell membrane structure is widely thought to retain the intracellular water and positively contributes to the presence of bound water in waste-activated sludge (WAS), which is the main obstacle of its highly-efficient dewatering. However, few studies realized the quantification of intracellular water fraction in the total bound water. Thus, there still may be some debates on whether and what extent of cell lysis is optimal for the dewaterability improvement. This study specifically focused on the effect of microbial cell lysis on the water occurrence states of WAS. The sonication, cyclic freezing-thawing and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) amendment were used as the non-chemical means for cell lysis without altering the chemical compositions of WAS. The extent of cell lysis was quantified by the aqueous lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) released from intracellular cytoplasm and the water occurrence states of WAS were characterized by the transverse relaxation time (T2) spectra of low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The results indicated that 8 h sonication (60 W/g dry matter, solid content of WAS: 23.10±0.30 g/L) completely lysed the microbial cells, but only increased the moderately mobile water fraction from 0.555% to 2.370%; similarly, it could be estimated that nearly 15% of cells were destructed after 5 times of freezing-thawing, but the fraction of moderately mobile water only rose from 0.555% to 0.805%. The transmission electron microscope (TEM) with ultrathin sections visually tracked the WAS micro-morphology accompanied with the cell lysis; the sonication caused the notable lysis of microbial cells and dispersed the external encapsulating components, which originally surrounded microbial cells closely; most of the microbial cells could be deformed but wasn't lysed by cyclic freezing-thawing; DMSO amendment made the outer edge of microbial cells tend to be rough, which may reflect the DMSO-enhanced permeability of cell membrane. The correlative analysis further indicated that the capillary suction time (CST) had the close correlation with particle size/zeta potential (Pearson coefficient>0.85, p-value<0.05), but no strong correlation was identified between CST and slightly reduced bound water contents (Pearson coefficient<0.9, p-value≥0.05). Instead of the cell integrity, the compositional aggregation states dominated the water occurrence states of WAS. Highly-efficient conditioning approaches should rely on the reduction of bio-floc porosity through eliminating solid-liquid interfacial affinity instead of damaging the cell membrane structure.

Keywords: Bound water; Cell lysis; Dewatering; Waste-activated sludge; Water-organics affinity.

MeSH terms

  • Dimethyl Sulfoxide
  • Particle Size
  • Sewage* / chemistry
  • Sonication
  • Waste Disposal, Fluid / methods
  • Water* / chemistry

Substances

  • Sewage
  • Water
  • Dimethyl Sulfoxide