Matching Items (24)
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Description
Human impact alters the natural environment via multiple pathways, including contamination from pollutants. This human activity may adversely impact an organism’s ability to respond to environmental change. Using Bisphenol-A (BPA), a common environmental contaminant, I examined how exposure affected behavioral strategies critical for survival in a changing environment. BPA is

Human impact alters the natural environment via multiple pathways, including contamination from pollutants. This human activity may adversely impact an organism’s ability to respond to environmental change. Using Bisphenol-A (BPA), a common environmental contaminant, I examined how exposure affected behavioral strategies critical for survival in a changing environment. BPA is used during plastic manufacturing, and it enters aquatic systems from wastewater streams; however, it is an endocrine-disruptor that has broad health effects from metabolism to behavior at a wide exposure range. In this study, I specifically tested whether environmentally relevant concentrations of BPA impact maximum metabolic rate and boldness in zebrafish, Danio rerio. I also examined activity level, optomotor response, body mass, and standard length to see if I can mechanistically explain any underlying changes caused by BPA. I treated groups of adult zebrafish for 7 days and exposed them to either 0.1% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO, control), a low environmentally relevant concentration of BPA (0.02 mg/L), or a 1-fold higher BPA concentration (0.2 mg/L). I found that the low exposure group experienced a decrease in maximum metabolic rate and the high exposure group showed a decrease in boldness. In other words, these changes in metabolism were not dosage dependent while the boldness results were dosage dependent. BPA had no effects on optomotor response, body mass, standard length or activity level. These results suggest that no level of BPA is safe, environmentally relevant concentrations are having an effect on adult organisms’ behavior and health that could affect their survival.
ContributorsLopez, Melissa (Author) / Martins, Emilia P (Thesis advisor) / Suriyampola, Piyumika S (Thesis advisor) / Conroy-Ben, Otakuye (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Radioactive cesium (137Cs), released from nuclear power plants and nuclear accidental releases, is a problem due to difficulties regarding its removal. Efforts have been focused on removing cesium and the remediation of the contaminated environment. Traditional treatment techniques include Prussian blue and nano zero-valent ion (nZVI) and nano-Fe/Cu particles to

Radioactive cesium (137Cs), released from nuclear power plants and nuclear accidental releases, is a problem due to difficulties regarding its removal. Efforts have been focused on removing cesium and the remediation of the contaminated environment. Traditional treatment techniques include Prussian blue and nano zero-valent ion (nZVI) and nano-Fe/Cu particles to remove Cs from water; however, they are not efficient at removing Cs when present at low concentrations of about 10 parts-per-billion (ppb), typical of concentrations found in the radioactive contaminated sites.

The objective of this study was to develop an innovative and simple method to remove Cs+ present at low concentrations by engineering a proteoliposome transporter composed of an uptake protein reconstituted into a liposome vesicle. To achieve this, the uptake protein, Kup, from E. coli, was isolated through protein extraction and purification procedures. The new and simple extraction methodology developed in this study was highly efficient and resulted in purified Kup at ~1 mg/mL. A new method was also developed to insert purified Kup protein into the bilayers of liposome vesicles. Finally, removal of CsCl (10 and 100 ppb) was demonstrated by spiking the constructed proteoliposome in lab-fortified water, followed by incubation and ultracentrifugation, and measuring Cs+ with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS).

The ICP-MS results from testing water contaminated with 100 ppb CsCl, revealed that adding 0.1 – 8 mL of Kup proteoliposome resulted in 0.29 – 12.7% Cs removal. Addition of 0.1 – 2 mL of proteoliposome to water contaminated with 10 ppb CsCl resulted in 0.65 – 3.43% Cs removal. These removal efficiencies were greater than the control, liposome with no protein.

A linear relationship was observed between the amount of proteoliposome added to the contaminated water and removal percentage. Consequently, by adding more volumes of proteoliposome, removal can be simply improved. This suggests that with ~ 60-70 mL of proteoliposome, removal of about 90% can be achieved. The novel technique developed herein is a contribution to emerging technologies in the water and wastewater treatment industry.
ContributorsHakim Elahi, Sepideh (Author) / Conroy-Ben, Otakuye (Thesis advisor) / Abbaszadegan, Morteza (Committee member) / Fox, Peter (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Activated Carbon has been used for decades to remove organics from water at large scale in municipal water treatment as well as at small scale in Point of Use (POU) and Point of Entry (POE) water treatment. This study focused on Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) and also activated Carbon Block

Activated Carbon has been used for decades to remove organics from water at large scale in municipal water treatment as well as at small scale in Point of Use (POU) and Point of Entry (POE) water treatment. This study focused on Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) and also activated Carbon Block (CB) were studied.

This thesis has three related elements for organics control in drinking water. First, coagulation chemistry for Alum and Aluminum Chlorohydrate (ACH) was optimized for significant organics removal to address membrane fouling issue at a local municipal water treatment plant in Arizona. Second, Rapid Small Scale Column Tests were conducted for removal of Perfluorinated compounds (PFC), PFC were present in groundwater at a local site in Arizona at trace levels with combined concentration of Perfluorooctaneoic Acid (PFOA) and Perfloorooctanesulfonic Acid (PFOS) up to 245 ng/L. Groundwater from the concerned site is used as drinking water source by a private utility. PFC Removal was evaluated for different GAC, influent concentrations and particle sizes. Third, a new testing protocol (Mini Carbon Block (MCB)) for bench scale study of POU water treatment device, specifically carbon block filter was developed and evaluated. The new bench scale decreased the hydraulic requirements by 60 times approximately, which increases the feasibility to test POU at a lab scale. It was evaluated for a common POU organic contaminant: Chloroform, and other model contaminants.

10 mg/L of ACH and 30 mg/L of Alum with pH adjustment were determined as optimal coagulant doses. Bituminous coal based GAC was almost three times better than coconut shell based GAC for removing PFC. Multiple tests with MCB suggested no short circuiting and consistent performance for methylene blue though chloroform removal tests underestimated full scale carbon block performance but all these tests creates a good theoretical and practical fundament for this new approach and provides directions for future researchers.
ContributorsAshani, Harsh Satishbhai (Author) / Westerhoff, Paul (Thesis advisor) / Hristovski, Kiril (Committee member) / Conroy-Ben, Otakuye (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
Description
Current demographic and water use trends prompt concerns for increasing water scarcity. Water reuse and wastewater reuse can help accommodate for some of these concerns. One application of this wastewater reuse can come in the form of agricultural applications. This, however, raises concerns of human and environmental exposure to antibiotic

Current demographic and water use trends prompt concerns for increasing water scarcity. Water reuse and wastewater reuse can help accommodate for some of these concerns. One application of this wastewater reuse can come in the form of agricultural applications. This, however, raises concerns of human and environmental exposure to antibiotic resistance genes and bacteria (ARGs/ARBs). Organizations such as the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization (WHO) cite increasing exposure and cases of antibiotic resistant bacteria related infections. This has led to a need for a more thorough understanding of risk and risk management strategies for these purposes. Biosolids can be used as fertilizers after treatment from wastewater treatment plants and as a result may be a potential avenue for exposure. Biosolids are activated sludge commonly dewatered and/or further treated for agricultural applications and are a focus of this thesis. The objectives of this thesis are (1) to contribute to a literature review of ARGs in biosolids with a specific focus on the effects of different treatment practices; and (2) quantify E. coli bacteria, intI1 (an integron-integrase gene used as an indicator of anthropogenic pollution), some heavy metals, and nutrients (N, P, and K) for newly collected biosolids samples in a multifactorial-designed lettuce growth experiment. Results found that most data points did not report wastewater treatment type. Additionally, TH/TH-MAD appeared to have lower ARG concentrations relative to other treatment types. Organizations such as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and the WHO provide maximum permissible limits of certain contaminants in plants and soils. Results found Cadmium concentrations in lettuce to be above these outlined limits. E. coli bacteria and intI1 results varied. Ultimately, in the future there needs to be more consistent reporting guidelines for obtaining ARG/ARB data and developing risk models for assessing potential exposure.
ContributorsKuppravalli, Aditya (Author) / Hamilton, Kerry (Thesis director) / Conroy-Ben, Otakuye (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Harrington Bioengineering Program (Contributor)
Created2024-05