Indoor Air Vocs Biofiltration by Bioactive Coating Packed Bed Bioreactors
Bioactive coatings are envisaged as a promising biotechnology to tackle indoor air pollution. This solution could cope with the low concentrations and the hydrophobicity of indoor air pollutants. A bioactive coating-based bioreactor was tested in this study for the abatement of different VOCs (n-hexane, toluene and α-pinene) at different empty bed residence times (EBRT) and inlet VOC concentrations. The performance of this reactor was compared with a conventional biofilm-based bioreactor operated with the same microbial inoculum. After an acclimation period, the bioactive coating-based bioreactor achieved abatements of over 50% for hexane, 80% for toluene and 70% for pinene, which were about 25%, 10% and 20% lower than the highest removals recorded in the biofilm-based bioreactor. Both bioreactors experienced a decrease in VOC abatement by ~ 25% for hexane, 45% for toluene and 40% for pinene, after reducing the EBRT to 28 s. When inlet VOC concentrations were progressively reduced, VOC abatement efficiencies did not improve. This fact suggested that low EBRTs and low inlet VOCs concentration hindered indoor air pollutant abatement as a result of a limited mass transfer and bioavailability. Metagenomic analyses showed that process operation with toluene, hexane and pinene as the only carbon and energy sources favored an enriched bacterial community represented by the genera Devosia, Mesorhizobium, Sphingobacterium and Mycobacterium, regardless of the bioreactor configuration
Year of publication: |
[2023]
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Authors: | González-Martín, Javier ; Cantera, Sara ; Munoz, Raul ; Lebrero, Raquel |
Publisher: |
[S.l.] : SSRN |
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