4.7 Article

Advanced materials for immobilization of purple phototrophic bacteria in bioremediation of oil-polluted wastewater

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 278, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130464

Keywords

Biodegradation; Biofilm; Crude oil; Immobilized carriers; Purple phototrophic bacteria; Rhodopseudomonas sp

Funding

  1. Vietnam National Foundation for Science and Technology Development (NAFOSTED) [106-NN.04e2015.45]

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Oil pollution from industrial activities, particularly the oil and gas industry, is a serious issue. This study evaluated the efficiency of cinder beats, coconut fiber, and polyurethane foam as immobilization carriers for purple phototrophic bacterial strains in biodegrading crude oil contaminated seawater, finding that the coconut fiber-bacteria system showed the highest removal efficiency for crude oil.
Oil pollution which results from industrial activities, especially oil and gas industry, has become a serious issue. Cinder beats (CB), coconut fiber (CF) and polyurethane foam (PUF) are promising immobilization carriers for crude oil biodegradation because they are inexpensive, nontoxic, and non-polluting. The present investigation was aimed to evaluate this advanced technology and compare the efficiency of these immobilization carriers on supporting purple phototrophic bacterial (PPB) strains in hydrocarbon biodegradation of crude oil contaminated seawater. The surface of these biocarriers was supplemented with crude oil polluted seawater and immobilized by PPB strains, Rhodopseudomonas sp. DD4, DQ41 and FO2. Through scanning electron microscopy (SEM), the bacterial cells were shown to colonize and attach strongly to these biocarriers. The bacteria-driven carrier systems degraded over 84.2% supplemented single polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The aliphatic and aromatic components in crude oil that treated with carrier-immobilized consortia were degraded remarkably after 14 day-incubation. Among the three biocarriers, removal of the crude oil by CF-bacteria system was the highest (nearly 100%), followed by PUF-bacteria (89.5%) and CB-bacteria (86.3%) with the initial crude oil concentration was 20 g/L. Efficiency of crude oil removal by CB-bacteria and PUF-bacteria were 86.3 and 89.5%, respectively. Till now, the studies on crude oil degradation by mixture species biofilms formed by PPB on different carriers are limited. The present study showed that the biocarriers of an oil-degrading consortium could be made up of waste materials that are cheap and eco-friendly as well as augment the biodegradation of oil-contaminated seawater. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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