Fang-Fang Xia
Zhejiang University
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Featured researches published by Fang-Fang Xia.
Waste Management | 2011
Jing Wang; Fang-Fang Xia; Yun Bai; Chengran Fang; Dong-Sheng Shen; Ruo He
Waste biocover soil was investigated as an alternative in regions with a shortage of landfill cover soil. In the work, effects of the composition, ambient conditions and nitrogen stress on CH(4) oxidation in waste biocover soil were studied. The results showed that the optimal composition of waste biocover soil as a landfill cover material for CH(4) oxidation was original pH value, 45% moisture and a particle size of ≤ 4mm. CH(4) oxidation rate increased rapidly over a CH(4) concentration range of 0.01-10% (v/v), and kept stable at CH(4) concentrations of 10-30% (v/v). The Michaelis-Menten model showed a good fit for the kinetic of CH(4) oxidation in landfill waste biocover soil with a maximum of 9.03 μmol/gd.w./h. The average Q(10) was 10.6 in the batch experiments. A level of 5% of oxygen concentration was enough to sustain the activity of methanotrophs community structure in waste biocover soil. Waste biocover soil had low baseline concentrations of NH(4)(+)-N and NO(3)(-)-N. Ammonia volatilization from landfills and nitrification in landfill waste biocover soils might stimulate CH(4) consumption at concentrations below 600 mg/kg. However, the contents of NH(4)(+)-N and NO(3)(-)-N above 1200 mg/kg would inhibit CH(4) oxidation in landfill waste biocover soil. Compared with NO(3)(-)-N, NH(4)(+)-N had a greater stimulating action as nutrient at lower concentrations and inhibitory effect at higher concentrations on CH(4) oxidation in landfill waste biocover soil.
Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2011
Ruo He; Fang-Fang Xia; Jing Wang; Chang-Liang Pan; Chengran Fang
Landfill is an important anthropogenic source of odorous gases. In this work, the adsorption characteristics of H(2)S on waste biocover soil, an alternative landfill cover, were investigated. The results showed that the adsorption capacity of H(2)S increased with the reduction of particle size, the increase of pH value and water content of waste biocover soil. The optimal composition of waste biocover soil, in regard to operation cost and H(2)S removal performance, was original pH value, water content of 40% (w/w) and particle size of ≤4 mm. A net increase was observed in the adsorption capacity of H(2)S with temperatures in the range of 4-35°C. The adsorption capacity of H(2)S on waste biocover soil with optimal composition reached the maximum value of 60±1 mg/kg at oxygen concentration of 10% (v/v). When H(2)S concentration was about 5% (v/v), the adsorption capacity was near saturation, maintaining at 383±40 mg/kg. Among the four experimental soils, the highest adsorption capacity of H(2)S was observed on waste biocover soil, followed by landfill cover soil, mulberry soil, and sand soil, which was only 9.8% of that of waste biocover soil.
Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2014
Fang-Fang Xia; Yao Su; Xiao-Meng Wei; Y.H. He; Z.C. Wu; A. Ghulam; Ruo He
Sulphur bioconversion in landfill cover soils, including the metabolism of sulphur‐oxidizing bacteria (SOB) and sulphate‐reducing bacteria (SRB), is one of the important processes affecting H2S emission from landfills. In this study, two landfills with or without landfill gas collection and utilization system were investigated to characterize the role of biotic and abiotic factors affecting diversity and activity of SOB and SRB in the landfill cover soils. The results revealed that the potential sulphur oxidation rates (SORs) and sulphate reduction rates (SRRs) varied with landfill sites and depths. SOR was significantly correlated with pH and SO42−, while SRR was significantly related with pH. The populations of both SOB and SRB were low in the acidic landfill cover soils (pH = 4·7–5·37). Cloning and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism profiles of soxB and dsrB showed that SOB including Halothiobacillus, Thiobacillus, Thiovirga and Bradyrhizobium, and SRB including Desulfobacca, Desulforhabdus and Syntrophobacter dominated in the landfill cover soils, and their distributions were affected mainly by pH value and organic matter contents of soils.
Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2012
Ruo He; Fang-Fang Xia; Yun Bai; Jing Wang; Dongsheng Shen
Hydrogen sulfide (H(2)S) is one of the primary contributors to odors at landfills. The mechanism of waste biocover soil (WBS) for H(2)S removal was investigated in simulated landfill systems with the contrast experiment of a landfill cover soil (LCS). The H(2)S removal efficiency was higher than 90% regardless of the WBS or LCS covers. The input of landfill gas (LFG) could stimulate the growth of aerobic heterotrophic bacteria, actinomycete, sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (SOB) in the WBS cover, while that caused a decrease of 1-2 orders of magnitude in the populations of actinomycete and fungi in the bottom layer of the LCS cover. As H(2)S inputted, the sulfide content in the WBS cover increased and reached the maximum on day 30. In the LCS cover, the highest soil sulfide content was exhibited in the bottom layer during the whole experiment. After exposure to LFG, the lower pH value and higher sulfate content were observed in the top layer of the WBS cover, while there was not a significant difference in different layers of the LCS cover. The results indicated a more rapid biotransformation between sulfide and sulfate occurred in the WBS cover compared to the LCS.
Chemosphere | 2012
Ruo He; Jing Wang; Fang-Fang Xia; Li-Juan Mao; Dongsheng Shen
Biocover soil has been demonstrated to have high CH(4) oxidation capacity and is considered as a good alternative cover material to mitigate CH(4) emission from landfills, yet the response of CH(4) oxidation activity of biocover soils to the variation of CH(4) loading during landfill stabilization is poorly understood. Compared with a landfill cover soil (LCS) collected from Hangzhou Tianziling landfill cell, the development of CH(4) oxidation activity of waste biocover soil (WBS) was investigated using simulated landfill systems in this study. Although a fluctuation of influent CH(4) flux occurred during landfill stabilization, the WBS covers showed a high CH(4) removal efficiency of 94-96% during the entire experiment. In the LCS covers, the CH(4) removal efficiencies varied with the fluctuation of CH(4) influent flux, even negative ones occurred due to the storage of CH(4) in the soil porosities after the high CH(4) influent flux of ~137 gm(-2) d(-1). The lower concentrations of O(2) and CH(4) as well as the higher concentration of CO(2) were observed in the WBS covers than those in the LCS covers. The highest CH(4) oxidation rates of the two types of soil covers both occurred in the bottom layer (20-30 cm). Compared to the LCS, the WBS showed higher CH(4) oxidation activity and methane monooxygenase activity over the course of the experiment. Overall, this study indicated the WBS worked well for the fluctuation of CH(4) influent flux during landfill stabilization.
Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2014
Xuan Zhang; Jiao-Yan Kong; Fang-Fang Xia; Yao Su; Ruo He
The influence of NH4(+) on microbial CH4 oxidation is still poorly understood in landfill cover soils. In this study, effects of NH4(+) addition on the activity and community structure of methanotrophs were investigated in waste biocover soil (WBS) treated by a series of NH4(+)-N contents (0, 100, 300, 600 and 1200mgkg(-1)). The results showed that the addition of NH4(+)-N ranging from 100 to 300mgkg(-1) could stimulate CH4 oxidation in the WBS samples at the first stage of activity, while the addition of an NH4(+)-N content of 600mgkg(-1) had an inhibitory effect on CH4 oxidation in the first 4 days. The decrease of CH4 oxidation rate observed in the last stage of activity could be caused by nitrogen limitation and/or exopolymeric substance accumulation. Type I methanotrophs Methylocaldum and Methylobacter, and type II methanotrophs (Methylocystis and Methylosinus) were abundant in the WBS samples. Of these, Methylocaldum was the main methanotroph in the original WBS. With incubation, a higher abundance of Methylobacter was observed in the treatments with NH4(+)-N contents greater than 300mgkg(-1), which suggested that NH4(+)-N addition might lead to the dominance of Methylobacter in the WBS samples. Compared to type I methanotrophs, the abundance of type II methanotrophs Methylocystis and/or Methylosinus was lower in the original WBS sample. An increase in the abundance of Methylocystis and/or Methylosinus occurred in the last stage of activity, and was likely due to a nitrogen limitation condition. Redundancy analysis showed that NH4(+)-N and the C/N ratio had a significant influence on the methanotrophic community in the WBS sample.
Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2013
Jiao-Yan Kong; Yao Su; Qi-Qi Zhang; Yun Bai; Fang-Fang Xia; Chengran Fang; Ruo He
Aerobic CH4 oxidation is an important process controlling CH4 release from landfills to the atmosphere. The aim of this study was to investigate the link between CH4 oxidation activity and methanotrophs abundance and diversity in landfill cover soils of different age.
Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2014
Yao Su; Xuan Zhang; Xiao-Meng Wei; Jiao-Yan Kong; Fang-Fang Xia; Wei Li; Ruo He
The biodegradation of CH4 and toluene in landfill cover soil (LCS) and waste biocover soil (WBS) was investigated with a serial toluene concentration in the headspace of landfill cover microcosms in this study. Compared with the LCS sample, the higher CH4 oxidation activity and toluene-degrading capacity occurred in the WBS sample. The co-existence of toluene in landfill gas would positively or negatively affect CH4 oxidation, mainly depending on the toluene concentrations and exposure time. The nearly complete inhibition of toluene on CH4 oxidation was observed in the WBS sample at the toluene concentration of ∼ 80,000 mg m(-3), which was about 10 times higher than that in the LCS sample. The toluene degradation rates in both landfill covers fitted well with the Michaelis-Menten model. These findings showed that WBS was a good alternative landfill cover material to simultaneously mitigate emissions of CH4 and toluene from landfills to the atmosphere.
Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2014
Yao Su; Xuan Zhang; Fang-Fang Xia; Qi-Qi Zhang; Jiao-Yan Kong; Jing Wang; Ruo He
Aerobic CH4 oxidation plays an important role in mitigating CH4 release from landfills to the atmosphere. Therefore, in this study, oxidation activity and community of methanotrophs were investigated in a subtropical landfill. Among the three sites investigated, the highest CH4 concentration was detected in the landfill cover soil of the site (A) without a landfill gas (LFG) recovery system, although the refuse in the site had been deposited for a longer time (∼14-15 years) compared to the other two sites (∼6-11 years) where a LFG recovery system was applied. In April and September, the higher CH4 flux was detected in site A with 72.4 and 51.7gm(-2)d(-1), respectively, compared to the other sites. The abundance of methanotrophs assessed by quantification of pmoA varied with location and season. A linear relationship was observed between the abundance of methanotrophs and CH4 concentrations in the landfill cover soils (R=0.827, P<0.001). The key factors influencing the methanotrophic diversity in the landfill cover soils were pH, the water content and the CH4 concentration in the soil, of which pH was the most important factor. Type I methanotrophs, including Methylococcus, Methylosarcina, Methylomicrobium and Methylobacter, and type II methanotrophs (Methylocystis) were all detected in the landfill cover soils, with Methylocystis and Methylosarcina being the dominant genera. Methylocystis was abundant in the slightly acidic landfill cover soil, especially in September, and represented more than 89% of the total terminal-restriction fragment abundance. These findings indicated that the LFG recovery system, as well as physical and chemical parameters, affected the diversity and activity of methanotrophs in landfill cover soils.
Bioresource Technology | 2011
Wenbing Li; Jun Yao; Fang-Fang Xia; Huajun Feng; Huan Feng; Chenjing Jiang; Chengran Fang; Dong-Sheng Shen
The aim of the present study was to investigate the leaching behavior of iron from simulated landfills with different operation modes, with an emphasis on the variation of iron in different oxidation state, ferrous Fe(II) and ferric Fe(III) percentage and the distribution of iron content in different landfill leachate fractions. The leaching behavior and accumulated amounts of iron leached out by leachate from conventional landfill (CL) and leachate recirculated landfill (RL) exhibited decidedly different trends except for the initial 28 days. In addition, the percentage of iron leached from CL and RL accounted 1.00% and 0.14% for the total amount in landfills, respectively. No correlations between iron and selected characteristics in leachate were found were observed in the two simulated landfills. Significant positive correlations between particulate bound iron and Fe(III) were found in the leachates from RL (R(2)=0.748) and CL (R(2)=0.833).