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  • Polyamide 6 microplastics f...
    Chen, Hongbo; Tang, Mengge; Yang, Xiao; Tsang, Yiu Fai; Wu, Yanxin; Wang, Dongbo; Zhou, Yaoyu

    Chemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996), 03/2021, Letnik: 408
    Journal Article

    This study shows that the leaching caprolactam (CPL) in PA6 microplastics significantly enhanced methane production in anaerobic digestion of WAS. Display omitted •PA6 microplastics motivate methane production in WAS anaerobic digestion.•PA6 microplastics offer marginal effect on solubilization and hydrolysis.•PA6 microplastics promote acidification and methanogenesis.•PA6 microplastics mainly affect anaerobic digestion by leaching caprolactam. Polyamide 6 (PA6) as a typical emerging microplastic pollutant has frequently been featured in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), yet its associated impact on waste activated sludge (WAS) anaerobic digestion process have not been fully understood. This study identified the key role of PA6 microplastics (5–50 particles/g TS) in methane production during anaerobic digestion through biochemical methane production testing and model-based analysis, and explored the mechanism involved by monitoring the conversion of metabolic intermediates, the activity of key enzymes, and the effects of leachate caprolactam (CPL). Unlike other microplastics that normally inhibit anaerobic digestion, PA6 significantly enhanced methane production due to the effect of CPL. The presence of 10 particles PA6/g TS improved methane production by 39.5% (from 124 ± 6 to 173 ± 8 L CH4/kg VS). Model-based analysis showed that PA6 promoted methane production potential and volatile solids destruction. PA6 offered marginal effect on the solubilization and hydrolysis of WAS, the leaching of CPL improved acidification and methanogenesis due to the promotion of key enzyme activities, which is the main reason why PA6 increased methane production. These findings indicate that PA6 is less toxic to WAS anaerobic digestion than other microplastics, which prompts an understanding of the dual role of microplastics in WWTPs.