3.1. OsMFCs performance with different FO membranes and operation modes
3.1.1. Power generation
Fig. 1A shows the electricity production of the OsMFCs with three different membranes under AL-FS mode. The voltage of CTA-ES-OsMFC remained high throughout the experiment, while that of the CTA-NW-OsMFC was high at the beginning, dropped rapidly in a first 2000 min of operation, and remained relatively stable. In comparison, the voltage of the CTA-NW-OsMFC was the lowest. When the reactors reached steady state, the output voltages of TFC-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC, and CTA-ES-OsMFC were 108.8, 106.9, and 153.5 mV, respectively. The high voltage output with the CTA-ES membrane might be due to the high water flux in that OsMFC, which accelerated ion transfer and consequently reduce internal resistance. Although the water flux (Fig. 3) with the TFC-ES membrane was also high, the growth of the anode bacteria might be limited due to the higher oxygen diffusion [11, 13]. It can be seen from Fig. 1B the electricity production of the three OsMFCs under the AL-DS mode was 148.7, 87.4, and 79.8 mV, for CTA-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC, respectively. It was worth noting that the voltages of the CTA-NW-OsMFC and TFC-ES-OsMFC under the AL-DS mode were 18.2 and 26.7% lower than those under the AL-FS mode, respectively, which might be due to more serious membrane fouling and faster drop of water flux on AL-DS mode [14]. When comparing with TFC-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC showed lower voltage in AL-FS mode but higher voltage in AL-DS mode. In the AL-FS mode, the voltage of CTA-NW-OsMFC was lower than that of TFC-ES-OsMFC owing to CTA-NW had a larger structural parameter (S) value. It was known that the larger the S value of the membrane was, the larger the mass transfer resistance would be (S value: CTA-NW (1.38) > TFC-ES (0.205 mm)) [11]. Even though TFC-ES exhibited a lower mass transfer resistance than CTA-NW, it displayed a lower power generation of the OsMFC test in AL-DS mode. This result could be attributed to the higher oxygen diffusion through TFC-ES. Diffusion of oxygen from the cathode chamber would limit constrain viability of anode bacteria, thereby reducing the output voltage [11, 12].
The polarization curves and power density curves at the initial operation stage were shown in Fig. 2(A-B). Under the AL-FS mode, the open circuit voltages of CTA-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC were 614.6, 545.7, and 551.8 mV, respectively, which were not significantly different from the open circuit voltage under AL-DS mode (590.7, 548.8, 551.2 mV). According to the slope of polarization curve [10], the internal resistance of CTA-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC under AL-FS mode were 236.75, 392.37, and 307.62 Ω, respectively, which were 28.26, 22.78, and 20.23% lower than that under AL-DS mode. As a critical parameter in OsMFCs internal resistance is directly linked to power density. The maximum power density of the OsMFCs exhibited a trend in the following order: FS-CTA-ES-OsMFC (0.44) > FS-TFC-ES-OsMFC (0.37) > DS-CTA-ES-OsMFC (0.33) > DS-TFC-ES-OsMFC (0.30) > FS-CTA-NW-OsMFC (0.28) > DS-CTA-NW-OsMFC (0.24 W m-2). As an important parameter of FO membranes, lower S value mean a reduction in internal concentration polarization (ICP) [15]. Thus, the lower the S value, the better the permeability of FO membrane [16]. The S values of CTA-NW, CAT-ES and TFC-ES membranes were 1.38, 0.334, and 0.205 mm, respectively [11]. The reason why CTA-NW-OsMFC generated the lowest current and maximum power density might be that the relatively large S value led to the increase in mass transfer resistance, which weakened the power generation capacity of the system [11]. To achieve high power generation, FO membranes used in OsMFCs should not only maintain a good mass transfer rate, but also minimize oxygen diffusion, as the intruded oxygen can serve as an alternative electron acceptor to the anode bacteria and short-circuit the system.
3.1.2. Reverse salt flux and water flux
Reverse salt flux and water flux of reactor were also important indicators to evaluate the OsMFC performance. Fig. 3 shows the reverse salt flux and water flux of three OsMFCs. Under the AL-FS mode, the order of reverse salt flux and water flux of the membranes were: CTA-ES (3.68) > TFC-ES (3.37) > CTA-NW (3.01 gMH), and CTA-ES (0.98) > TFC-ES (0.79) > CTA-NW (0.56 LMH), respectively. The ratios between water flux and reverse salt flux were thus 0.27, 0.18, and 0.23 L g-1, respectively. Under the AL-DS mode, the order of reverse salt flux and water flux of membranes were: CTA-ES (4.28) > TFC-ES (4.28) > CTA-NW (4.25 gMH), and CTA-ES (1.02) > TFC-ES (0.84) > CTA-NW (0.71 LMH). The ratios between water flux and reverse salt flux were 0.24, 0.17, and 0.20 L g-1, respectively. The reverse salt flux and water flux under the AL-FS mode were both smaller than that under the AL-DS mode, and CTA-ES in those two modes showed better performance than the other two membranes, which was consistent with the previous results (Fig. 1 and 2). Under AL-FS mode, draw side was diluted with the formation of ICP, then reduced osmotic pressure difference in two sides of membrane. In the meantime, draw solute entered the membrane through the porous support layer, increasing the resistance over the membrane, which might be the reason for this difference [17]. However, microorganisms and macromolecular organic substances in the anolyte might block porous support layer under AL-DS mode, thus increasing membrane resistance. Therefore, the difference of water flux on AL-DS and AL-FS mode was not particularly significant.
3.1.3. Pollutant removal performance
In Fig. 4, the removal efficiencies of TOC, total nitrogen and TP by three OsMFCs under the two modes were very similar, with no obvious difference. All OsMFCs had a removal efficiency of more than 70% for TOC and total nitrogen, and more than 85% for TP. Once active layer of membrane faced anolyte (AL-FS mode), some of microorganisms in the anolyte deposited on the membrane surface, causing membrane clogging and thereby affecting the contaminant removal [18]. In AL-DS mode, the effective mass transfer driving force was large, and the pollutants formed a higher concentration gradient in support layer under concentrated concentration polarization, so that more pollutants reached the cathode [19]. Therefore, the removal efficiencies of the OsMFCs under the two modes were similar in this experiment. However, the removal of ammonia nitrogen was not as efficient. Among the OsMFCs, DS-CTA-NW-OsMFC had the lowest removal efficiency for ammonia nitrogen, which was only 52.43 ± 0.41%. In contrast, the OsMFCs under the AL-FS mode showed higher removal efficiencies for ammonia nitrogen than under the AL-DS mode. FS-CTA-ES-OsMFC achieved the highest ammonia nitrogen removal of 70.12 ± 0.28%. It has been reported that, to maintain charge balance, NH4+-N in the anolyte migrates into the catholyte when Na+ diffused into the anolyte [20]. In OsMFCs, the FO membrane surface carried more negative charge, which led to an increase in the bidirectional diffusion of NH4+ and Na+ [20]. A previous study has reported that ammonium ion movement from the anode to the cathode promoted by water flux [20]. From Fig 4, the FO test of CTA-ES membrane showed the highest water flux in both AL-FS and AL-DS modes. Therefore, OsMFCs with CTA-ES membrane had the highest ammonia nitrogen removal efficiency. In AL-DS mode, although the membrane water flux was high, it would produce severe ICP and membrane fouling, thus reducing the removal effect of pollutants [19]. Overall, the removal of various pollutants in landfill leachate was satisfactory compared with that in the published literature (Table S1), which proved that OsMFCs is a promising technology for landfill leachate treatment.
3.2. Microbial community structure on different FO membranes
3.2.1. Microbial diversity
The abundance and diversity of bacterial community could be revealed through diversity analysis. Table 2 listed the Alpha diversity indices of the microbial communities in the three OsMFCs. The ACE and Chao1 were indices that estimate number of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in a community and were commonly used to estimate the total number of species. Table 2 showed that both the ACE index and the Chao1 index follow the same order: CTA-ES-OsMFC > CTA-NW-OsMFC > TFC-ES-OsMFC. The Shannon and Simpson index are used to estimate the microbial diversity in a sample: a high diversity is reflected by a high Shannon index and a low Simpson index. As shown in Table 2, the ranking of the Shannon index was CTA-NW-OsMFC (5.09) > CTA-ES-OsMFC (4.73) > TFC-ES-OsMFC (4.35). Correspondingly, the order of the Simpson index was CTA-NW-OsMFC (0.02) < CTA-ES-OsMFC (0.03) < TFC-ES-OsMFC (0.05). Both indices indicated a highly diverse microbial community on the CTA-NW membrane. The diversity analysis results are reliable as indicated by the high coverage index of 0.99 for the three OsMFCs. The rarefaction curve (Fig. S2) also indicates that CTA-NW-OsMFC had the highest number of microbial species, while TFC-ES-OsMFC had the lowest number of species.
Table 2 Species diversity of microbial communities on different membranes
Sample-ID
|
Seq-num
|
OTU
|
ACE
|
Chao1
|
Shannon
|
Simpson
|
Coverage
|
CTA-NW-OsMFC
|
62582
|
1526
|
1905.85
|
1822.93
|
5.09
|
0.02
|
0.99
|
CTA-ES-OsMFC
|
75625
|
1516
|
1909.36
|
1865.47
|
4.73
|
0.03
|
0.99
|
TFC-ES-OsMFC
|
47491
|
1126
|
1527.06
|
1473.72
|
4.35
|
0.05
|
0.99
|
3.2.2. Microbial community composition
At the genus level, the community structure on the different membranes was similar, but the abundance of the genus was different (Fig. 5A). Genera belonging to Proteobacteria (Pseudomonas, Thiopseudomonas, Marinobacterium, Arcobacter, Sulfurospirillum, Rhodopseudomonas, Desulfobulbus, Pusillimonas, Advenella), Firmicutes (Saccharofermentans and Tissierella), Bacteroidetes (Proteiniphilum), and Synergistetes (Aminobacterium) were the dominant taxa on the membrane surface.
Proteobacteria is mostly anaerobic or facultative anaerobic gram-negative bacteria. It was widely distributed on the membrane surface, and the percentages in CTA-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC were 40.11, 47.21, and 68.11%, respectively. Many studies had shown that Proteobacteria exists extensively in MFC anodes [21, 22], thus key genera are discussed in details below.
Pseudomonas is a heterotrophic bacterium under the γ-proteobacteria class, which uses organic matter as a energy source for anaerobic respiration [23]. Pseudomonas accounted for 6, 13.56, and 20.55% in the CTA-NW-OsMFC, CTA-ES-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC, respectively, and thus was speculated to be the major electroactive bacteria in the OsMFCs. It could also be seen from Fig. S3 that Pseudomonas was most abundant on the three membranes. Pham et al. [23] found that Pseudomonas produced phenazine compounds for electron shuttling and improved MFC performance in mixed cultures. The abundance of Marinobacterium in the TFC-ES-OsMFC (4.42%) was relatively higher than in the CTA-NW-OsMFC (1.14%) and CTA-ES-OsMFC (2.04%). Marinobacterium has been reported to be halophiles [24]. Because the catholyte was 1 mol L-1 NaCl, the forward osmosis would cause reversely transported salts. The landfill leachate also contained a certain salinity, resulting in high salinity of the anolyte. Arcobacter belongs to the ε-proteobacteria class whose bioelectrochemical activity has been reported [25]. The percentage of Arcobacter in CTA-ES-OsMFC (9.54%) was higher than in CTA-NW-OsMFC (6.01%) and TFC-ES-OsMFC (0.35%). This might be one of the reasons why CTA-ES-OsMFC had a better power generation effect (Fig. 2). Fedorovich et al. [26] found that Arcobacter butzleri ED-1 was an electrogenic microorganism that could efficiently use acetate as a carbon source. Due to the presence of Saccharofermentans in OsMFCs, the organic matter is degraded into acetic acid, which leads to better growth of Arcobacter. Rhodopseudomonas belongs to the α-proteobacteria class, is a Gram-negative bacterium,which secretes a phenolic electron mediator with weak electrical energy and uses various carbon as an energy source to generate electricity [26]. Rhodopseudomonas in CTA-NW-OsMFC, CTA-ES-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC were 3.8, 4.43, and 2.86%, respectively. Thiopseudomonas as a denitrifying bacteria [27] showed a percentage of 1.58, 1.57, and 10.05% in CTA-NW-OsMFC, CTA-ES-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC, respectively.
Firmicutes have been reported to utilize complex organic matter to produce electricity [28]. The abundance of Firmicutes in the CTA-ES-OsMFC, CTA-NW-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC were 28.85, 24.23, and 11.80%, respectively, probably due to the presence of complex high organic in landfill leachate. In this phylum, Saccharofermentans are known to perform hydrolysis, fermentation, and acetogenesis [29]. Its abundance in CTA-NW-OsMFC, CTA-ES-OsMFC, and TFC-ES-OsMFC were 3.34, 3.58, and 2.24%, respectively.
Pseudomonas , Arcobacter and Rhodopseudomonas are commonly found in bioelectrochemical systems and are speculated to be the main electrogenic bacteria in the OsMFCs [30]. However, some well-known electroactive microorganisms (e.g., Anaeromusa, Dechlormonas, Geobacter, and etc.) were not found in this study, probably because the salt in the catholyte passed through the membranes and caused high anode salinity. Anaeromusa and Geobacter microbes existed extensively in substrate where lactate and citrate were carbon sources [31, 32]. Dechlormonas was more active in domestic wastewater [32]. In addition, landfill leachate as an anode substrate has a complex composition and high toxicity that may be inhibitory to those microorganisms.
3.3. Microbial community structure at different OsMFCs sites
3.3.1. Microbial diversity
It can be seen from Table 3 that the ACE index and Chao1 index are the highest in the anolyte (1928.77, 1875.12) compared to the TFC-ES membrane (1527.06, 1473.72), anode carbon felt (1579.99, 1513.01), and catholyte (222.52, 208.63). Similarly , the anolyte sample showed the highest Shannon index and the lowest Simpson index, suggesting that the anolyte community had high richness and diversity [33]. The same result could also be proven in the rarefaction curves (Fig. S4). As shown in Table 3, the coverage index of the four samples indicated that the sequencing results has captured the dominant taxa in the communties.
Table 3 Species diversity of microbial communities on different OsMFCs sites
Sample-ID
|
Seq-num
|
OTU
|
ACE
|
Chao1
|
Shannon
|
Simpson
|
Coverage
|
Membrane
|
47491
|
1126
|
1527.06
|
1473.72
|
4.35
|
0.05
|
0.99
|
Electrode
|
63407
|
1241
|
1579.99
|
1513.01
|
4.74
|
0.03
|
0.99
|
Anolyte
|
64396
|
1536
|
1928.77
|
1875.12
|
5.09
|
0.02
|
0.99
|
Catholyte
|
64566
|
200
|
222.52
|
208.63
|
1.69
|
0.28
|
1.00
|
3.3.2. Microbial community composition
As shown in Fig. 5B, there were some differences in community structure for four samples of TFC-ES-OsMFCs. Aliidiomarina, Halomonas, Pseudomonas, Rhodopseudomonas, Methylophaga, Thiopseudomonas, Marinobacterium, Desulfuromonas (these genus belong to Proteobacteria phylum), Saccharofermentans, Tissierella, Sporanaerobacter (belong to the Firmicutes phylum) were the dominant species of four samples.
The Proteobacteria phylum was gain dominant in the communities, and the abundance of Proteobacteria on the TFC-ES membrane, anode carbon felt, in the anolyte, and catholyte were 68.11, 36.02, 36.52, and 97.62%, respectively. Aliidiomarina was found to be significantly enriched in the catholyte with an abundance of 40.59% but not at other locations. This result was the same as shown in Fig. S5. Halomonas, a rod-shaped gram-negative bacteria that can survive in saline environments [34], was also abundant with 31.16% only in the catholyte. Methylophaga as an aerobic Gram-negative moderate halophilic genus that utilizes a single carbon sugar in the ribulose monophosphate pathway as a carbon source showed a high abundance of 14.97% in the catholyte [35]. The predominance of those taxa was correlated with the higher salinity in catholyte.
The abundance of Pseudomonas detected on the TFC-ES membrane, anode carbon felt, in the anolyte, and catholyte samples were 20.55, 1.87, 7.88, and 0.58%. A small amount of Pseudomonas was also found in the catholyte, probably because a part of the microorganisms permeated into the catholyte during the operation. The abundance of Rhodopseudomonas genus on the TFC-ES membrane, anode carbon felt, in the anolyte were 2.86, 13.35, and 6.64%, respectively. The high abundance of Rhodopseudomonas on the carbon felt reflected its electroactive nature. Desulfuromonas can grow through oxidizing acetate and reducing elemental sulfur [36]. The abundance of this taxa was as high as 5.11% on the carbon but low in membrane (0.11) and anolyte (0.68%) and not detected in catholyte. Thiopseudomonas was observed relatively abundant on the carbon felt (1.32%) and in the anolyte (3.04%).