Biological Reduction of Trichloroethene Supported by Fe(0)

Abstract
An anaerobic culture reductively transformed trichloroethene (TCE) in an aqueous medium containing elemental iron as the sole electron source. The TCE disappearance rate was enhanced and the product distribution was markedly altered when the culture was present. In abiotic samples containing Fe(0) but no culture, 11 μmol TCE (equivalent to an aqueous concentration of 260 μM) disappeared over a period of 39 days, with ethene and ethane as the major reduction products. Small amounts of cis‐dichloroethene (cis‐DCE), 1,1‐DCE, and vinyl chloride (VC) also were detected. When the culture was incubated with TCE and Fe(0), the same amount of TCE was transformed in less than 2 weeks. The major products after 39 days were VC, ethene, and ethane. VC accounted for 65% of the initial TCE and appeared to be reduced further to ethene at slow rates. The significant VC production in the culture‐amended samples indicates that most TCE was transformed microbially rather than chemically. The data indicate that abiotic and biological reduction of chlorinated ethenes can be coupled to enhance treatment efficiency. The results also suggest that microbial dechlorination within and downgradient from iron walls is potentially important for evaluating the long‐term performance of permeable iron barriers.