Hydrobiological
Mechanism Controlling the Synergistic
Effects of Unsaturated Flow and Soil Organic Matter on the Degradation
of Emerging Organic Contaminants in Soils
posted on 2022-07-29, 19:04authored byXijuan Chen, Yuanyuan Dai, Mingyang Zhao, Frank E. Löffler, Jie Zhuang
Hydrology is a key factor influencing microbial degradation
of
emerging organic contaminants (EOCs) in soils, but the underlying
mechanisms are not clear. In this study, biotic and abiotic column
experiments were performed to investigate the removal and degradation
of five EOCs in soils with different soil organic matter (SOM) contents
under saturated and unsaturated flow conditions. In biotic experiments,
54–90% of bisphenol A (BPA) and 9–22% of ibuprofen (IBU)
were removed from the aqueous phase of saturated columns due to adsorption
and biodegradation. The biodegradation removed 26–65% of BPA
and 1–22% of IBU. Decreasing soil pore water saturation from
100 to 80% increased BPA removal to 97–100% and IBU removal
to 42–43% due to increased biodegradation (67–81% for
BPA and 36–39% for IBU). No significant removal of BPA and
IBU was observed in SOM-removed soils under saturated and unsaturated
flow conditions. The desaturation did not influence sorptive losses
of BPA (<27%) and IBU (<7%), suggesting their negligible adsorption
at air–water interfaces but increased biodegradation of BPA
and IBU sorbed at SOM–water interfaces. The study shows that
soil drying and SOM can synergistically degrade BPA and IBU but have
no effect on recalcitrant carbamazepine, tetracycline, and ciprofloxacin.