4.7 Article

Antimony leaching from antimony-bearing ferric oxyhydroxides by filamentous fungi and biotransformation of ferric substrate

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 664, Issue -, Pages 683-689

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.02.033

Keywords

Antimony; Aspergillus niger; Bioleaching; Biovolatilization

Funding

  1. Scientific Grant Agency of the Slovak RepublicMinistry of Education
  2. Slovak Academy of Sciences under VEGA [1/0164/17, 1/0354/19, 1/0146/18, 1/0390/19]
  3. Grant of SGS, Faculty ofMining and Geology of VSB - Technical University of Ostrava [SP2019/12]
  4. European Regional Development Fund-Project Center for Advanced Applied Sciences [CZ. 02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000778]

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Ferric oxyhydroxides are natural scavengers of antimony, thus, they contribute significantly to antimony immobilization in soils and sediments. Recent studies, however, usually omit microbial influence on geochemically stable antimony-ferric oxyhydroxide association. Therefore, we have evaluated fungal contribution to antimony mobility during static cultivation of common soil fungus Aspergillu.s niger in presence of ferric oxyhydroxides. Our results indicate distinguished effect of fungus on antimony distribution at two different antimony concentrations that were used for antimony pre-adsorbtion onto ferric oxyhydroxides prior to the inoculation. Approximately 36% of antimony was bioextracted by fungus from antimony bearing ferric oxyhydroxide after 14-day cultivation when the 8.9 mg.L-1 antimony concentration was used for pre-adsorption. However, no statistically significant change of antimony content in ferric oxyhyclroxicles was observed after cultivation when initial 48 mg.L-1 antimony concentration was used for pre-adsorption. As Mossbauer spectroscopy and XRD analysis indicated, nanosized akageneite, goethite, and lepidocrocite enhanced their crystallinity during cultivation, while hematite was identified only after the cultivation. Nevertheless, presence of ferric oxyhydroxides at both initial concentrations enabled transformation of antimony into volatile derivatives, and almost 9.5% of antimony was biovolatilized after cultivation. These results contribute significantly to environmental geochemistry of antimony-ferric oxyhydroxides association and highlight the importance of microbial activity in relation to ferric component of natural geochemical barriers. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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