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Simultaneous removal of ammonia nitrogen, phosphate, zinc, and phenol by degradation of cellulose in composite mycelial pellet bioreactor: Enhanced performance and community co-assembly mechanism.

In this experiment, the prepared tea biochar-cellulose@LDH material (TB-CL@LDH) was combined with mycelium pellets to form the composite mycelial pellets (CMP), then assembled and immobilized with strains Pseudomonas sp. Y1 and Cupriavidus sp. ZY7 to construct a bioreactor. At the best operating parameters, the initial concentrations of phosphate (PO4 3- -P), ammonia nitrogen (NH4 + -N), chemical oxygen demand (COD), zinc (Zn2+ ), and phenol were 22.3, 25.0, 763.8, 1.0, and 1.0 mg L-1 , the corresponding removal efficiencies were 80.4, 87.0, 83.4, 91.8, and 96.6%, respectively. Various characterization analyses demonstrated that the strain Y1 used the additional carbon source produced by the strain ZY7 degradation of cellulose to enhance the removal of composite pollutants and clarified the principle of Zn2+ and PO4 3- -P removal by adsorption, co-precipitation and biomineralization. Pseudomonas and Cupriavidus were the dominant genera according to the high-throughput sequencing. As shown by KEGG results, nitrification and denitrification genes were affected by phenol. The study offers prospects for the simultaneous removal of complex pollutants consisting of NH4 + -N, PO4 3- -P, Zn2+ , and phenol.

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