Center for Biofilm Engineering
Thesis Abstract:
"Chromatographic, Spectroscopic and Microscopic Analyses Reveal the
Impact of Iron Oxides and Electron Shuttles on the Degradation Pathway of
2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene (TNT) by a Fermenting Bacterium"
Contamination of surface and
subsurface environments with explosives such as 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT)
is a worldwide problem. The fate and analysis of TNT were investigated in
numerous artificially contaminated model systems. We developed a unique high
performance liquid chromatography gradient elution method for the analysis
of commonly observed TNT metabolites and EPA explosives. Column temperature
was identified as the key parameter for optimal separation.
Iron (hydr)oxides play an
important role in the reduction, sorption and fate of TNT in soil and
sediment. Consequently, characterization of the nature and properties of
natural and synthetic Fe (hydr)oxides is important for determining reaction
mechanisms and surface-associated chemical processes. This work thus
summarizes the potential applicability of imaging and spectroscopic
techniques for eliciting chemical and physical properties of iron (hydr)oxides.
TNT is persistent in soils due to its low redox
potential and sorption. Batch and column studies revealed some of the first
results on TNT desorption behavior in two well-defined model soil systems.
Biosurfactants were found to be the most promising technique for enhanced
TNT desorption.
Batch studies with a
Cellulomonas sp. in the presence of ferrihydrite and the electron
shuttle anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS) were conducted to reveal biotic
and abiotic mechanisms contributing to the degradation of TNT. Strain ES6
was found to reduce TNT and ferrihydrite with enhanced reduction in the
presence of AQDS. Ferrihydrite stimulated the formation of more reduced TNT
metabolites such as 2,4-diamino-6-nitrotoluene. Interestingly, a completely
different degradation pathway was observed in AQDS-amended iron-free cell
suspensions, showing a rapid transformation of TNT to
2,4-dihydroxylamino-6-nitrotoluene, which transformed into unidentified
polar products.
The influence of iron phases (i.e.
hematite, magnetite, and ferrihydrite) and secondary Fe mineral formation on
the degradation of TNT was also evaluated. The initial reduction of TNT was
fastest in the presence of hematite; however, the further reduction of
hydroxylamino-dinitrotoluenes was fastest in the presence of magnetite and
ferrihydrite (no AQDS). The impact of AQDS was predominant in the presence
of hematite resulting in the formation of 2,4,6-triaminotoluene.
Ferrihydrite underwent reductive dissolution with the formation of secondary
hematite. The enhanced TNT reduction in ferrihydrite-amended systems was
therefore most likely due to redox-active Fe(II) rather than secondary Fe
phases.
Chromatographic, Spectroscopic and Microscopic Analyses Reveal the
Impact of Iron Oxides and Electron Shuttles on the Degradation Pathway of
2,4,6-Trinitrotoluene (TNT) by a Fermenting Bacterium, Thesis Defense
by Thomas Borch, Environmental Sciences & CBE, Montana State University,
December 2003.
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