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This study investigated the difference in biofilm growth between pristine polypropylene microplastics and aged polypropylene microplastics. The microplastics were added to Tempe Town Lake water for 4 weeks. Each week the microplastic biofilms were quantified. Comparing the total biofilm counts, the results showed that the aged microplastic biofilms were larger

This study investigated the difference in biofilm growth between pristine polypropylene microplastics and aged polypropylene microplastics. The microplastics were added to Tempe Town Lake water for 4 weeks. Each week the microplastic biofilms were quantified. Comparing the total biofilm counts, the results showed that the aged microplastic biofilms were larger than the pristine each week. By week 3 the aged microplastic counts had almost doubled in size increasing from 324 to 626 Colony Forming Units per gram in just one week. There was a significant difference in the diversity found from week 1 to week 4. About 40% of the diversity for the pristine microplastic biofilm was seen as light-yellow dots and about 60% of these dots were seen on the aged microplastic biofilms in both weeks. As the microplastics were submerged in the lake water, new phenotypes emerged varying from week 1 to week 4 and from pristine to aged microplastic biofilms. Generally, it was found that as the microplastics stay in the environment there is more biofilm on the particles. The aged microplastics have a larger amount of biofouling, and the pristine microplastic biofilms were found to have more diversity of phenotypes.

Created2021-05
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This report analyzes the potential for accumulation of boron in direct potable reuse. Direct potable reuse treats water through desalination processes such as reverse osmosis or nanofiltration which can achieve rejection rates of salts sometimes above 90%. However, boron achieves much lower rejection rates near 40%. Because of this low

This report analyzes the potential for accumulation of boron in direct potable reuse. Direct potable reuse treats water through desalination processes such as reverse osmosis or nanofiltration which can achieve rejection rates of salts sometimes above 90%. However, boron achieves much lower rejection rates near 40%. Because of this low rejection rate, there is potential for boron to accumulate in the system to levels that are not recommended for potable human consumption of water. To analyze this issue a code was created that runs a steady state system that tracks the internal concentration, permeate concentration, wastewater concentration and reject concentration at various rejection rates, as well as all the flows. A series of flow and mass balances were performed through five different control volumes that denoted different stages in the water use. First was mixing of clean water with permeate; second, consumptive uses; third, addition of contaminant; fourth, wastewater treatment; fifth, advanced water treatments. The system cycled through each of these a number of times until steady state was reached. Utilities or cities considering employing direct potable reuse could utilize this model by estimating their consumption levels and input of contamination, and then seeing what percent rejection or inflow of makeup water they would need to obtain to keep boron levels at a low enough concentration to be fit for consumption. This code also provides options for analyzing spikes and recovery in the system due to spills, and evaporative uses such as cooling towers and their impact on the system.
ContributorsDoidge, Sydney (Author) / Fox, Peter (Thesis director) / Perreault, Francois (Committee member) / Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering Program (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-12
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ABSTRACT Peptide microarrays may prove to be a powerful tool for proteomics research and clinical diagnosis applications. Fodor et al. and Maurer et al. have shown proof-of-concept methods of light- and electrochemically-directed peptide microarray fabrication on glass and semiconductor microchips respectively. In this work, peptide microarray fabrication based on the

ABSTRACT Peptide microarrays may prove to be a powerful tool for proteomics research and clinical diagnosis applications. Fodor et al. and Maurer et al. have shown proof-of-concept methods of light- and electrochemically-directed peptide microarray fabrication on glass and semiconductor microchips respectively. In this work, peptide microarray fabrication based on the abovementioned techniques were optimized. In addition, MALDI mass spectrometry based peptide synthesis characterization on semiconductor microchips was developed and novel applications of a CombiMatrix (CBMX) platform for electrochemically controlled synthesis were explored. We have investigated performance of 2-(2-nitrophenyl)propoxycarbonyl (NPPOC) derivatives as photo-labile protecting group. Specifically, influence of substituents on 4 and 5 positions of phenyl ring of NPPOC group on the rate of photolysis and the yield of the amine was investigated. The results indicated that substituents capable of forming a π-network with the nitro group enhanced the rate of photolysis and yield. Once such properly substituted NPPOC groups were used, the rate of photolysis/yield depended on the nature of protected amino group indicating that a different chemical step during the photo-cleavage process became the rate limiting step. We also focused on electrochemically-directed parallel synthesis of high-density peptide microarrays using the CBMX technology referred to above which uses electrochemically generated acids to perform patterned chemistry. Several issues related to peptide synthesis on the CBMX platform were studied and optimized, with emphasis placed on the reactions of electro-generated acids during the deprotection step of peptide synthesis. We have developed a MALDI mass spectrometry based method to determine the chemical composition of microarray synthesis, directly on the feature. This method utilizes non-diffusional chemical cleavage from the surface, thereby making the chemical characterization of high-density microarray features simple, accurate, and amenable to high-throughput. CBMX Corp. has developed a microarray reader which is based on electro-chemical detection of redox chemical species. Several parameters of the instrument were studied and optimized and novel redox applications of peptide microarrays on CBMX platform were also investigated using the instrument. These include (i) a search of metal binding catalytic peptides to reduce overpotential associated with water oxidation reaction and (ii) an immobilization of peptide microarrays using electro-polymerized polypyrrole.
ContributorsKumar, Pallav (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Thesis advisor) / Allen, James (Committee member) / Johnston, Stephen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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The waterways in the United States are polluted by agricultural, mining, and industrial activities. Recovery of valuable materials, such as energy and nutrients, from these waste streams can improve the economic and environmental sustainability of wastewater treatment. A number of state-of-the-art anaerobic bioreactors have promise for intensified anaerobic biological treatment

The waterways in the United States are polluted by agricultural, mining, and industrial activities. Recovery of valuable materials, such as energy and nutrients, from these waste streams can improve the economic and environmental sustainability of wastewater treatment. A number of state-of-the-art anaerobic bioreactors have promise for intensified anaerobic biological treatment and energy recovery, but they have drawbacks. The drawbacks should be overcome with a novel anaerobic biological wastewater treatment process: the anaerobic biofilm membrane bioreactor (AnBfMBR). This research works aims to advance key components of the AnBfMBR. The AnBfMBR is a hybrid suspended growth and biofilm reactor. The two main components of an AnBfMBR are plastic biofilm carriers and membranes. The plastic biofilm carriers provide the surface onto which the biofilms grow. Membranes provide liquid-solid separation, retention of suspended biomass, and a solids-free effluent. Introducing sufficient surface area promotes the biofilm accumulation of slow-growing methanogens that convert volatile fatty acids into methane gas. Biofilms growing on these surfaces will have a mixed culture that primarily consists of methanogens and inert particulate solids, but also includes some acetogens. Biomass that detaches from biofilms become a component of the suspended growth. A bench-scale AnBfMBR was designed by the AnBfMBR project team and constructed by SafBon Water Technology (SWT). The primary objective of this thesis project was to evaluate the ability of plastic biofilm carriers to minimize ceramic-membrane fouling in the AnBfMBR setting. A systematic analysis of mixing for the bench-scale AnBfMBR was also conducted with the plastic biofilm carriers. Experiments were conducted following a ‘run to failure’ method, in which the ceramic membranes provide filtration, and the time it takes to reach a ‘failure transmembrane pressure (TMP)’ was recorded. The experiments revealed two distinct trends. First, the time to failure TMP decreased as mixed liquor suspended solids concentration (MLSS) concentration increased. Second, increasing the carrier fill extend the time to failure, particularly for higher MLSS concentrations. Taken together, the experiments identified an optimized “sweet spot” for the AnBfMBR: an operating flux of 0.25-m/d, a failure TMP of 0.3-atm pressure, MLSS of 5,000 – 7,500 mg/L, and 40% carrier fill.
ContributorsRoman, Brian Aaron (Author) / Rittmann, Bruce (Thesis advisor) / Boltz, Joshua (Committee member) / Perreault, Francois (Committee member) / Fox, Peter (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Water quality assessment is essential for maintaining healthy ecosystems and protecting human health. Data interrogation and exploratory data analysis techniques are used to analyze the spatial and temporal variability of water quality parameters, identifying correlations, and to better understand the factors that impacts microbial and chemical quality of water. The

Water quality assessment is essential for maintaining healthy ecosystems and protecting human health. Data interrogation and exploratory data analysis techniques are used to analyze the spatial and temporal variability of water quality parameters, identifying correlations, and to better understand the factors that impacts microbial and chemical quality of water. The seasonal dynamics of microbiome in surface waters were investigated to identify the factors driving these dynamics. Initial investigation analyzed two decades of regional water quality data from 20 various locations in Central Arizona, USA. Leveraging advanced data science techniques, the study uncovered correlations between crucial parameters, including dissolved organic carbon (DOC), ultraviolet absorbance (UVA), and specific ultraviolet absorbance (SUVA). These findings provide foundational insights into the dynamic of overall water quality. A comprehensive 12-month surface water sample collection and study was conducted to investigate potential bias in bacterial detection using EPA approved Membrane Filtration (MF) technique. The results underscore that while MF excels in recovering bacteria of public health significance, it exhibits biases, particularly against small and spore-forming bacteria and Archaea, such as Bacilli, Mollicutes, Methylacidiphilae, and Parvarchaea. This emphasizes the importance of complementing standard microbiology approaches to mitigate technological biases and enhance the accuracy of microbial water quality testing, especially for emerging pathogens. Furthermore, a complementary study of microbial dynamics within a model drinking water distribution systems (DWDSs) using treated water from the same source water as the above study. The influence of pipe material and water temperature on the microbiome and trace element composition was investigated. The research unveiled a preferential link between pipe material and trace elements, with water temperature significantly impacting the microbiome to a higher degree than the chemical composition of water. Notably, Legionellaceae and Mycobacteriaceae were found to be prevalent in warmer waters, highlighting the substantial influence of water temperature on the microbiome, surpassing that of pipe material. These studies provide comprehensive insights into the spatial and temporal variability of water quality parameters. Analyzing microbial data in depth is crucial in detecting bacterial species within a monitoring program for adjusting operational conditions to reduce the presence of microbial pathogens and enhance the quality of drinking water.
ContributorsAloraini, Saleh (Author) / Abbaszadegan, Morteza (Thesis advisor) / Fox, Peter (Committee member) / Perreault, Francois (Committee member) / Alum, Absar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Plastics, when released into the environment, undergo surface weathering due to mechanical abrasion and ultraviolet (UV) exposure that leads to the formation of microplastics. Weathering also introduces oxygen functional groups on the surface, which will affect surface interactions compared to pristine plastics. In this study, the adsorption of selected model

Plastics, when released into the environment, undergo surface weathering due to mechanical abrasion and ultraviolet (UV) exposure that leads to the formation of microplastics. Weathering also introduces oxygen functional groups on the surface, which will affect surface interactions compared to pristine plastics. In this study, the adsorption of selected model contaminants of high environmental relevance was evaluated at different level of abiotic and biotic transformation to understand how microplastics aging influences contaminant adsorption on high density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PPE). Microplastics were aged through an accelerated weathering process using UV exposure with or without hydrogen peroxide. The effect of UV aging on the microplastics’ morphology and surface chemistry was characterized by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy, streaming Zeta potential, Brunauer–Emmett–Teller Krypton adsorption analyses and Computed X-Ray Tomography. Sorption of organic contaminants was found to be higher on aged microplastics compared to pristine ones for all contaminants investigated. This increase in sorption affinity was found to be associated with a change in the surface chemistry and not in an increase in specific surface area after aging. Biological surface weathering (i.e., biofilm formation) was carried out at a lab-scale setting using model biofilm-forming bacteria followed by adsorption affinity measurement of biofilm-laden microplastics with the model organic contaminants. The amount of microbial biomass accumulated on the surface was also evaluated to correlate the changes in sorption affinity with the change in microplastic biofilm formation. The results of this study emphasize the need to understand how contaminant-microplastics interactions will evolve as microplastics are altered by biotic and abiotic factors in the environment.
ContributorsBhagat, Kartik (Author) / Perreault, Francois (Thesis advisor) / Westerhoff, Paul (Committee member) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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The developing world has witnessed a rapid growth in crop production since the green revolution in the 1960s. Even though the population has almost doubled since then, food production has tripled; most of this growth can be attributed to crop research, fertilizers, infrastructure, and market development. Although the green revolution

The developing world has witnessed a rapid growth in crop production since the green revolution in the 1960s. Even though the population has almost doubled since then, food production has tripled; most of this growth can be attributed to crop research, fertilizers, infrastructure, and market development. Although the green revolution came with benefits, it has been widely criticized for its negative impact on the environment. The excessive and inappropriate use of fertilizers has led to human and livestock diseases, polluted waterways, loss of soil fertility, and soil acidity. Even though the green revolution was started to ensure food security, it has unintended consequences on human health and the surrounding environment. This dissertation focuses on the surface characteristics of graphene nanomaterials (GNMs) and their application in agriculture. Among the nutrients needed for crops, some can be easily obtained from the environment (e.g., carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, etc.), while others, like nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K), often requires supplementation by fertilizers. However, conventional fertilizers have caused problems associated with soil pH changes, stunted plant growth, and disrupted beneficial microbial processes. Implementing nano-fertilizers, which can act as controlled-release fertilizers, is important. GNMs have shown some promising characteristics for the controlled release of drugs and other chemicals. Therefore, in the first part of this study, the loading capacity of the three macronutrients (N, P, and K) over GNMs of different surface chemistry was characterized. In the second part of this thesis, the effect of graphene oxide (GO) addition on wheat germination was evaluated. Rapid germination is essential for crop establishment to ensure low-cost and high-quality products and keep in check the sustainable use of resources in commercial agriculture. The results of this thesis indicated that the application of GO significantly enhanced the seed germination potential of the wheat crops. It not only increases the root weight but also improves its volume. Future work should focus on the impact of surface chemistry of GNMs on germination, which, when combined with the materials’ ability to bind nutrients, could help better guide the use of GNMs in agriculture.
ContributorsKumar, Abhishek (Author) / Perreault, Francois (Thesis advisor) / Fox, Peter (Committee member) / Oukarroum, Abdallah (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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This study investigated the difference in biofilm growth on pristine and aged polypropylene microplastics exposed to Tempe Town Lake water for 8 weeks. The research question here is, does the aging of microplastic (MPs) change the biofilm formation rate and composition of the biofilm in comparison with the pristine MPs.

This study investigated the difference in biofilm growth on pristine and aged polypropylene microplastics exposed to Tempe Town Lake water for 8 weeks. The research question here is, does the aging of microplastic (MPs) change the biofilm formation rate and composition of the biofilm in comparison with the pristine MPs. To answer this question, the biofilm formation was quantified using different methods over time for both pristine polypropylene and aged polypropylene using agar plate counts and crystal violet staining. Colony counts based on agar plating showed an increase in microbial growth over the 8 weeks of treatment, with the aged MPs accumulating higher microbial counts than the pristine MPs. The diversity of the biofilm decreased over time for both MPs and the aged MPs had overall less diversity in biofilm, based on phenotype enumeration, in comparison with the pristine MPs. Higher biofilm growth on aged MPs was confirmed using crystal violet staining, which stains the negatively charged biological compounds such as proteins and the extracellular polymeric substance matrix of the biofilm. Using this complementary approach to colony counting, the same trend of higher biofilm growth on aged MPs was found. Further studies will focus on confirming the phenotype findings using microbiome analysis following DNA extraction. This project created a methodology to quantify biofilm formation on MPs, which was used to show that MPs may accumulate more biofilms in the environment as they age under sunlight.
ContributorsMushro, Noelle (Author) / Perreault, Francois (Thesis advisor) / Hamilton, Kerry (Committee member) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Global shortages of urea and unsustainable production of synthetic urea have caused concerns over the future of food production, automobile operation, and other processes. Urine is a waste product that could supplement synthetic urea production. This study utilizes polyamide reverse osmosis (RO) and nanofiltration (NF) membranes in a cross-flow orientation

Global shortages of urea and unsustainable production of synthetic urea have caused concerns over the future of food production, automobile operation, and other processes. Urine is a waste product that could supplement synthetic urea production. This study utilizes polyamide reverse osmosis (RO) and nanofiltration (NF) membranes in a cross-flow orientation to selectively recover urea from fresh human urine. Urea permeation experiments were conducted to determine the effects of urea stabilization via pH adjustment and membrane type on the production of a pure urea product. Fouling mitigation experiments were then conducted to determine the efficacy of microfiltration (MF) pretreatment on the reduction of the membrane fouling layer. The results showed that the NF90 membrane had advantageous performance to the BW30 RO and NF270 membranes, permeating 76% of the urea while rejecting 68% of the conductivity. Urine stabilization via acetic acid or sodium hydroxide addition did not inhibit membrane performance, signifying the use of pH 5 as a suitable pretreatment condition. Real fresh urine had higher rejection of constituents for NF90, suggesting the reduction of flux across the membrane due to interactions with organic material. MF pretreatment reduced foulant thickness and permeate flux loss but did not change the speciation of microorganisms. Finally, different urea-based products, such as fertilizers, biocement, and synthetic polymers, were suggested to show the potential of urine-recovered urea to reduce costs. The results from this work show the efficacy of using polyamide RO and NF membranes to supplement unsustainable synthetic production of urea with sustainably sourced urea from a waste product, human urine.
ContributorsCrane, Lucas Christopher (Author) / Boyer, Treavor H (Thesis advisor) / Perreault, Francois (Committee member) / Westerhoff, Paul (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Nitrate leaching from agricultural systems poses a threat to ecosystems and human health. Integrating 2D carbon-based graphite nano additive (GNA) soil amendments previously demonstrated potential in mitigating nitrate loss, yet the responsible mechanism was unclear. To clarify the causal mechanism, this dissertation aimed to identify and understand mechanisms of how

Nitrate leaching from agricultural systems poses a threat to ecosystems and human health. Integrating 2D carbon-based graphite nano additive (GNA) soil amendments previously demonstrated potential in mitigating nitrate loss, yet the responsible mechanism was unclear. To clarify the causal mechanism, this dissertation aimed to identify and understand mechanisms of how addition of graphite nano-additive (GNA) soil amendment reduces N leaching through agricultural soil by sequential investigation employing laboratory soil incubation tests, batch adsorption experiments, soil column experiments, and greenhouse pot study. Soil incubation tests were conducted with four commercially available graphene nanomaterials to establish that soil microbial activity indicated by respiration was significantly enhanced when soil was amended with graphene (e.g., GNA). Additionally, gene abundance assessment from the same incubation tests indicated a potentially slowed soil nitrification (ammonium to nitrate conversion) by GNA. Separate batch absorption tests indicated that GNA was unlikely to retain nitrate through adsorption. Soil column experiments were designed to probe the dependency of N retention in GNA-amended soil primarily due to altered microbial activity from assessing the impact of temperature, soil saturation, sterility, hydraulic retention time, GNA dose, and soil organic carbon. Finally, a greenhouse plant growth study was designed to assess how GNA impacts soil biology. Enzyme activity indicated GNA could stimulate soil carbon mineralization and improve soil bioavailable carbon. Gene abundance assessment showed total bacterial community size was unimpacted but selected and suppressed certain bacterial groups (e.g., suppressed bacterial amoA gene abundance).16S bacterial community sequencing showed that GNA significantly altered the bulk and rhizosphere soil microbiome composition. GNA-induced selection of certain bacterial classes (e.g., Bacilli) holds significant implications in aspects of plant growth and nutrient acquisition. This dissertation revealed mechanisms behind GNA-induced decrease of nitrate leaching in agricultural soil, aiding progress to its integration into conventional agriculture to improve nitrogen fertilizer efficiency for a food-secure future.
ContributorsDas, Partho (Author) / Westerhoff, Paul (Thesis advisor) / Penton, Christopher Ryan (Committee member) / Perreault, Francois (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024