Dichloromethane (8.9 mg/1) was eliminated from industrially polluted, anaerobic groundwater in a fixed-bed reactor (43 m 3) which was packed with activated charcoal and operated continuously for over three years. The elimination of dichloromethane over this period was some ten-fold in excess of the sorptive capacity of the charcoal, and the elimination (3.7 mg/h. [kg of charcoal]: residence time, 49 h) was tentatively attributed to deha]ogenative microorganisms immobilized on the charcoal. Anaerobic enrichment cultures, with dichloromethane as the sole added source of carbon and energy, were inoculated with material from the reactor. Reproducibly complete substrate disappearance in subcultures was observed when traces of groundwater (1%) or yeast extract (0.01%) were supplied. Fed-batch experiments under an atmosphere of CO2 plus N2 led to the conversion in 11 days of 11 mM dichloromethane to 3 mM acetate and 2 mM methane, with a growth yield of 0.4 g of protein/mol of dichloromethane; insignificant amounts (< 1/zM) of chloromethane accumulated. Methanogenesis could be inhibited by 50 mM 2-bromoethane sulfonate without any effect on the dehalogenation rate. The maximum dehalogenation rate was 0.13 mmol dichloromethane/h-1 (2.6 mkat/ kg of protein).
An anaerobic enrichment culture with glucose as the sole source of carbon and energy plus trichloroethene (TCE) as a potential electron acceptor was inoculated with material from a full size anaerobic charcoal reactor that biologically eliminated dichloromethane from contaminated groundwater (Stromeyer et al. 1991). In subcultures of this enrichment complete sequential transformation of 10 microM TCE via cis-dichloroethene and chloroethene to ethene was reproducibly observed. Maintenance of this activity on subcultivation required the presence of TCE in the medium. The enrichment culture was used to inoculate an anaerobic fixed-bed reactor containing sintered glass Raschig elements as support material. The reactor had a total volume of 1780 ml and was operated at 20 degrees C in an up-flow mode with a flow rate of 50 ml/h. It was fed continuously with 2 mM glucose and 55 microM TCE. Glucose was converted to acetate as the major product and to a minor amount of methane; TCE was quantitatively dehalogenated to ethene. When, in addition to TCE, tetrachloroethene or 1,2-dichloroethane were added to the system, these compounds were also dehalogenated to ethene. In contrast, 1,1,1-trichloroethane was not dehalogenated, but at 40 microM severely inhibited acetogenesis and methanogenesis. When the concentration of TCE in the feed was raised to 220 microM, chloroethene transiently accumulated, but after an adaptation period ethene was again the only volatile product detected in the effluent. The volumetric degradation rate at this stage amounted to 6.2 mumol/l/h.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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