How bacteria 'Chat' their way to carbon-neutral water treatment
en-GBde-DEes-ESfr-FR

How bacteria 'Chat' their way to carbon-neutral water treatment

07/05/2026 TranSpread

Wastewater treatment is a hidden climate challenge. Plants consume massive amounts of electricity—with aeration alone using up to 75% of total energy—while also emitting nitrous oxide and methane, greenhouse gases dozens of times more potent than carbon dioxide. Traditional solutions focus on hardware upgrades, like better pumps. But these miss the root of the problem: the efficiency of the microbes doing the work.QS controls everything from biofilm formation to how microbes exchange electrons. However, its effects can be contradictory, sometimes reducing emissions while other times making them worse.

Researchers from the Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen), KU Leuven, and Beijing Normal University have published (DOI: 10.1016/j.ese.2026.100701) a comprehensive analysis in the journal Environmental Science and Ecotechnology (available online April 2026). The team, led by Professor Xiao-Chi Feng, reviewed hundreds of studies to map how QS—bacterial "talk"—governs greenhouse gas emissions and energy use. Their findings reveal that targeted QS manipulation can reduce nitrous oxide release by nearly 50%, cut aeration energy by over 60%, and dramatically improve methane production, offering a roadmap for turning wastewater plants into energy producers.

The review uncovers a nuanced microbial control system. For nitrous oxide (N₂O), the same signal molecule can have opposite effects depending on its dose. For example, a low concentration of a specific signaling molecule (C12-HSL) cut N₂O emissions by nearly half, while a higher dose of another (C12-HSL) boosted emissions by over 40% by disrupting key enzymes. This means precision is everything.

On energy savings, the study highlights how QS can be a game-changer. By promoting the formation of dense, fast-settling granular sludge, QS reduces the need for prolonged aeration—the plant's biggest energy drain. In membrane bioreactors, the team found that "quorum quenching" (disrupting bacterial chatter) could slash fouling and reduce filtration energy by over 80%.

Most exciting is the potential for energy recovery. The review shows that quorum sensing (QS) enhances the expression of genes related to direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET)—essentially a microbial power grid. This QS-enhanced gene expression increased DIET-related activity 12-fold, turning more organic waste into methane, which can be captured and burned for electricity, directly offsetting the plant's energy debt.

The authors explained that the goal is not to simply boost or block bacterial communication, but to tune it like an instrument. "We found that QS is neither a universal hero nor a villain. Its impact depends entirely on the context—the specific microbial community, the signal molecule, and even the time of day," they said. "For aeration, we want to promote granulation, but for membrane filters, we want to stop biofilms. The real breakthrough is learning to switch between these modes. By precisely managing this microbial social network, we believe wastewater plants can fundamentally rewire their internal energy budget and move from a cost center to a power station."

This research provides a clear technological pathway for plant operators. Instead of expensive chemical additives or energy-intensive cleaning, facilities could house "quorum sensing" or "quorum quenching" bacteria in specialized beads to control fouling at reduced costs and energy consumption. For new plants, the findings support designs that promote granular sludge from day one, shrinking physical footprints and energy needs. The biggest economic win likely comes from anaerobic digesters, where regulating QS could boost methane output by over 30%, turning sludge into a steady revenue stream. The authors are now calling for pilot-scale trials to establish precise dosing protocols, as the next step is moving from lab-scale promise to real-world, carbon-neutral operation.

###

References

DOI

10.1016/j.ese.2026.100701

Original Source URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ese.2026.100701

Funding information

This investigation was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 52470032 and 52321005), the Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation (No. 2024A1515030138), the State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment (Harbin Institute of Technology) (No. 2024TS25), and Shenzhen Science and Technology Program (No. JCYJ20240813104840054 and SYSPG20241211173610011).

About Environmental Science and Ecotechnology

Environmental Science and Ecotechnology (ISSN 2666-4984) is an international, peer-reviewed, and open-access journal published by Elsevier. The journal publishes significant views and research across the full spectrum of ecology and environmental sciences, such as climate change, sustainability, biodiversity conservation, environment & health, green catalysis/processing for pollution control, and AI-driven environmental engineering. The latest impact factor of ESE is 14.3, according to the Journal Citation ReportsTM 2024.

Paper title: Quorum sensing for carbon-neutral wastewater treatment: Mechanisms, challenges, technological pathways, and future prospects
Fichiers joints
  • Quorum sensing and quenching: A microbial dial for carbon-neutral wastewater treatment
07/05/2026 TranSpread
Regions: North America, United States, Europe, Netherlands, Asia, China
Keywords: Science, Chemistry, Environment - science, Life Sciences

Disclaimer: AlphaGalileo is not responsible for the accuracy of content posted to AlphaGalileo by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the AlphaGalileo system.

Témoignages

We have used AlphaGalileo since its foundation but frankly we need it more than ever now to ensure our research news is heard across Europe, Asia and North America. As one of the UK’s leading research universities we want to continue to work with other outstanding researchers in Europe. AlphaGalileo helps us to continue to bring our research story to them and the rest of the world.
Peter Dunn, Director of Press and Media Relations at the University of Warwick
AlphaGalileo has helped us more than double our reach at SciDev.Net. The service has enabled our journalists around the world to reach the mainstream media with articles about the impact of science on people in low- and middle-income countries, leading to big increases in the number of SciDev.Net articles that have been republished.
Ben Deighton, SciDevNet
AlphaGalileo is a great source of global research news. I use it regularly.
Robert Lee Hotz, LA Times

Nous travaillons en étroite collaboration avec...


  • The Research Council of Norway
  • SciDevNet
  • Swiss National Science Foundation
  • iesResearch
Copyright 2026 by DNN Corp Terms Of Use Privacy Statement