TY - JOUR
T1 - Pore-Scale Heterogeneities Improve the Degradation of a Self-Inhibiting Substrate
T2 - Insights from Reactive Transport Modeling
AU - Gharasoo, Mehdi
AU - Elsner, Martin
AU - Van Cappellen, Philippe
AU - Thullner, Martin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/9/20
Y1 - 2022/9/20
N2 - In situ bioremediation is a common remediation strategy for many groundwater contaminants. It was traditionally believed that (in the absence of mixing-limitations) a better in situ bioremediation is obtained in a more homogeneous medium where the even distribution of both substrate and bacteria facilitates the access of a larger portion of the bacterial community to a higher amount of substrate. Such conclusions were driven with the typical assumption of disregarding substrate inhibitory effects on the metabolic activity of enzymes at high concentration levels. To investigate the influence of pore matrix heterogeneities on substrate inhibition, we use a numerical approach to solve reactive transport processes in the presence of pore-scale heterogeneities. To this end, a rigorous reactive pore network model is developed and used to model the reactive transport of a self-inhibiting substrate under both transient and steady-state conditions through media with various, spatially correlated, pore-size distributions. For the first time, we explore on the basis of a pore-scale model approach the link between pore-size heterogeneities and substrate inhibition. Our results show that for a self-inhibiting substrate, (1) pore-scale heterogeneities can consistently promote degradation rates at toxic levels, (2) the effect reverses when the concentrations fall to levels essential for microbial growth, and (3) an engineered combination of homogeneous and heterogeneous media can increase the overall efficiency of bioremediation.
AB - In situ bioremediation is a common remediation strategy for many groundwater contaminants. It was traditionally believed that (in the absence of mixing-limitations) a better in situ bioremediation is obtained in a more homogeneous medium where the even distribution of both substrate and bacteria facilitates the access of a larger portion of the bacterial community to a higher amount of substrate. Such conclusions were driven with the typical assumption of disregarding substrate inhibitory effects on the metabolic activity of enzymes at high concentration levels. To investigate the influence of pore matrix heterogeneities on substrate inhibition, we use a numerical approach to solve reactive transport processes in the presence of pore-scale heterogeneities. To this end, a rigorous reactive pore network model is developed and used to model the reactive transport of a self-inhibiting substrate under both transient and steady-state conditions through media with various, spatially correlated, pore-size distributions. For the first time, we explore on the basis of a pore-scale model approach the link between pore-size heterogeneities and substrate inhibition. Our results show that for a self-inhibiting substrate, (1) pore-scale heterogeneities can consistently promote degradation rates at toxic levels, (2) the effect reverses when the concentrations fall to levels essential for microbial growth, and (3) an engineered combination of homogeneous and heterogeneous media can increase the overall efficiency of bioremediation.
KW - bioavailability
KW - contaminant biodegradation
KW - pore network modeling
KW - pore-scale heterogeneities
KW - substrate self-inhibition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85137913654&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.2c01433
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.2c01433
M3 - Article
C2 - 36069624
AN - SCOPUS:85137913654
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 56
SP - 13008
EP - 13018
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
IS - 18
ER -