1 research outputs found
Microbially Driven Fenton Reaction for Degradation of the Widespread Environmental Contaminant 1,4-Dioxane
The carcinogenic cyclic ether compound
1,4-dioxane is employed
as a stabilizer of chlorinated industrial solvents and is a widespread
environmental contaminant in surface water and groundwater. In the
present study, a microbially driven Fenton reaction was designed to
autocatalytically generate hydroxyl (HO<sup>•</sup>) radicals
that degrade 1,4-dioxane. In comparison to conventional (purely abiotic)
Fenton reactions, the microbially driven Fenton reaction operated
at circumneutral pH and did not the require addition of exogenous
H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> or UV irradiation to regenerate Fe(II)
as Fenton reagents. The 1,4-dioxane degradation process was driven
by pure cultures of the Fe(III)-reducing facultative anaerobe <i>Shewanella oneidensis</i> manipulated under controlled laboratory
conditions. <i>S. oneidensis</i> batch cultures were provided
with lactate, Fe(III), and 1,4-dioxane and were exposed to alternating
aerobic and anaerobic conditions. The microbially driven Fenton reaction
completely degraded 1,4-dioxane (10 mM initial concentration) in 53
h with an optimal aerobic-anaerobic cycling period of 3 h. Acetate
and oxalate were detected as transient intermediates during the microbially
driven Fenton degradation of 1,4-dioxane, an indication that conventional
and microbially driven Fenton degradation processes follow similar
reaction pathways. The microbially driven Fenton reaction provides
the foundation for development of alternative in situ remediation
technologies to degrade environmental contaminants susceptible to
attack by HO<sup>•</sup> radicals generated by the Fenton reaction
