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Electrochemical disinfection of secondary effluent from a wastewater treatment plant: Removal efficiency of ARGs and variation of antibiotic resistance in surviving bacteria

[Display omitted] •Generations of free chlorine and OH varied between T and D treatments.•ARGs removal was closely associated with free chlorine and OH.•The relative abundance of ARGs decreased with increasing current densities.•Less multi-antibiotic resistant bacteria survived EC treatments.•The MA...

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Published in:Chemical engineering journal (Lausanne, Switzerland : 1996) Switzerland : 1996), 2020-07, Vol.392, p.123674, Article 123674
Main Authors: Li, Hongna, Zhang, Zhiguo, Duan, Jiangtao, Li, Na, Li, Binxu, Song, Tingting, Sardar, Muhammad Fahad, Lv, Xiwu, Zhu, Changxiong
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Generations of free chlorine and OH varied between T and D treatments.•ARGs removal was closely associated with free chlorine and OH.•The relative abundance of ARGs decreased with increasing current densities.•Less multi-antibiotic resistant bacteria survived EC treatments.•The MAR indices of wastewater was significantly reduced after EC disinfection. Laboratory-scale electrochemical (EC) disinfection experiments were carried out to investigate its removal efficiency for 23 antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) that confer against 8 classes of antibiotics and its effects on the antibiotic resistance of surviving bacteria. EC treatments were conducted at different current densities (D treatment) and with different reaction times (T treatment). Prolonged electrolysis resulted in a higher inactivation rate than an increased current density, while the former was less efficient in the removal of ARGs. For example, the inactivation ratios for the T20 and D80 treatments were both >99%, while the decrease in the relative abundance of ARGs with D80 (from 0.54 to 4.1) was greater than that with T20 (from 5.4 to 5.2). The detection frequency of bacteria resistant to the tested antibiotics decreased by 9–100% after EC treatment. This was mainly attributed to a change in bacterial composition. The proportion of bacteria with high antibiotic resistance frequencies decreased (such as Escherichia), while that with low resistance frequencies (like Acinetobacter and Pseudomonas) increased. In addition, fewer multi-antibiotic-resistant bacteria survived EC disinfection, which also contributed to the significant decrease in the frequency of antibiotic resistant bacteria as well as in the multi-antibiotic-resistance indices of wastewater samples (from 0.47 to 0.35) after EC treatment (P 
ISSN:1385-8947
1873-3212
DOI:10.1016/j.cej.2019.123674