Producing bioplastics from wastewater

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Bioplastics produced from wastewater
Bioplastics produced from wastewater


Wastewater treatment plants can do more than just wastewater treatment. In the future, they should also recover resources. One approach that researchers at Eawag are pursuing is the conversion of the organic carbon contained in wastewater into bioplastics with the help of bacteria.

The treatment of wastewater to protect human health and water bodies remains the primary task of wastewater treatment plants. In addition, the recovery of resources is becoming increasingly important on the path to circular economy. Wastewater, for example, contains a lot of organic carbon that is often converted into methane for further energy production. Antoine Brison and Nicolas Derlon from Eawag’s Process Engineering Department have now investigated whether and how bioplastics could be obtained instead from organic carbon as a higher-value product. To do this, they work with bacteria that are able to store organic carbon as polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA). These biopolymers serve as energy and carbon source for the bacteria. They can be extracted from the bacterial cells and further processed to biodegradable plastic.

If bioplastics could be produced from wastewater, this would offer several advantages over current production methods. PHAs are at present produced from primary feedstock such as sugar or vegetable oils under sterile conditions. This results in high production costs, which is why PHA bioplastics, despite their attractive properties, cannot compete with petroleum-based plastics so far and therefore remain a niche product. The use of organic carbon from wastewater, which is available for free, and the use of mixed microbial cultures, which do not require energy-intensive, sterile conditions, are therefore a promising approach.

It takes three steps to produce these bioplastics from wastewater. First, as much of the organic carbon as possible must be extracted from the wastewater. Subsequently, this carbon must be fermented into volatile fatty acids, the precursors of PHA. Finally the researchers can selectively grow PHA-storing bacteria in the acid-rich substrate.

Space-saving microsieves for separating the carbon

For the separation of organic carbon from wastewater, the researchers compared two different methods: On the one hand, the primary settler available in most wastewater treatment plants, and on the other hand, microsieves as an alternative separation technology. The results show that both methods are equally efficient at removing organic carbon from wastewater. The yield was particularly high when flocculants were added to the wastewater beforehand, so that smaller particles clumped together to form larger ones and could thus be separated better. In this way, about 60% of the organic carbon contained in the wastewater could be recovered. The fermentation of carbon captured with the two different separation technologies produced substrates that had a similar fatty acid composition and abundance, and are therefore equally suitable for the production of PHA plastic. However, a major advantage of microsieves is that they are significantly smaller - their space requirement is only about 10 to 15 % of that of primary settlers. This has also convinced some Swiss wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), such as the WWTP Sihltal (Zurich), which will be using microsieves from 2023.

PHA-storing bacteria have an advantage in nutrient-limited environments

For PHA-production, a biomass enriched in PHA-storing bacteria must be grown on the fatty acid-rich substrate. The researchers therefore investigated under which conditions these bacteria grow best and can prevail over other, non-PHA storing bacteria. Since PHA are storage substances that bacteria only produce under restricted growth conditions, e.g. when an important nutrient such as phosphorus is missing, it was reasonable to assume that nutrient deficiencies could be a selection advantage for PHA storing bacteria. The researchers therefore experimented with synthetic wastewater with different ratios of carbon to phosphorus in the experimental hall at Eawag. They found that the proportion of PHA storing bacteria in the microbial community actually increased when the phosphorus availability decreased. In the optimal case, the PHA storing bacteria dominated with over 90%, at the same time also formed the most PHA plastic and completely purified the wastewater of carbon and phosphorus.

Subsequently, the experiments were carried out with real wastewater whose composition fluctuated over the course of the 150-day trial. Although this meant that the nutrients phosphorus and nitrogen were not consistently limiting, up to 70% of the biomass was in the form of PHA at the end of the trial.

Possible applications of bioplastics from wastewater

Further investigations are still needed to better understand and optimise the processes producing bioplastics from wastewater before pilot tests can take place in public wastewater treatment plants.

And where do the researchers see the potential applications, if bioplastics could one day be actually produced from wastewater? "Even if these plastics might eventually become economically viable, it would be impossible to produce enough volume to cover society’s demand for their petro-chemical counterparts," says Antoine Brison. Another major obstacle to the utilisation of bioplastics from wastewater is that the legal framework conditions and social acceptance are still lacking. Brison therefore sees potential in more specific niche applications for the bioplastics made form wastewater - for example as coating for fertilizers to achieve a slow release. Another possibility is self-healing concrete, which a Dutch company is working on. Therein, PHAs could serve as a carbon source for bacteria that heal cracks in concrete when water penetrates by stimulating the formation of lime.

Brison, A.; Rossi, P.; Gelb, A.; Derlon, N. (2022) The capture technology matters: composition of municipal wastewater solids drives complexity of microbial community structure and volatile fatty acid profile during anaerobic fermentation, Science of the Total Environment, 815, 152762 (13 pp.), doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152762 , Institutional Repository

Brison, A.; Rossi, P.; Derlon, N. (2022) Influent carbon to phosphorus ratio drives the selection of PHA-storing organisms in a single CSTR, Water Research X, 16, 100150 (11 pp.), doi: 10.1016/j.wroa.2022.100150 , Institutional Repository