4.7 Article

Enhanced cadmium removal by growing Bacillus cereus RC-1 immobilized on different magnetic biochars through simultaneous adsorption and bioaccumulation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 13, Pages 18495-18507

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-17125-x

Keywords

Biosorbent preparation; Heavy metal; Magnetic biochar; Microorganism immobilization; Biosorption mechanisms

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42007323]
  2. Shenzhen Science & Technology Project [SZIITWDZC2021A01]
  3. Basic and Applied Research Program of Guangdong Province [2019A1515012187]
  4. High-level Professionals and Innovative Teams [SZIIT2019KJ024, SZIIT2019KJ007]

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The study demonstrated that bacteria immobilized on magnetic biochar had a higher biosorption efficiency for cadmium compared to free bacteria, attributed to the simultaneous adsorption and bioaccumulation facilitated by the magnetic biochar carrier and active bacteria. The biosorption process by immobilized pellets was primarily driven by ion exchange and complexation, further deepening our understanding of biosorption by microorganisms immobilized onto magnetic biochar for metal removal.
Biosorption of cadmium by growing bacteria immobilized on the three magnetic biochars derived from rice straw (MRSB-pellet), sewage sludge (MSSB-pellet), and chicken manure (MCMB-pellet) was investigated, respectively. Total biosorption capacity of the pellets was tested under varying range of pH, culture time, and initial Cd2+ concentration. The maximum biosorption capacity of 93.02 mg/g was obtained with MRSB-pellet, followed by MSSB-pellet (68.02 mg/g) and MCMB-pellet (63.95 mg/g). The biosorption by these immobilized bacterial pellets was more effective than free bacteria; this enhancement could be the result of simultaneous adsorption and bioaccumulation, mainly resulting from magnetic biochar carrier and active bacteria, respectively. The biosorption process by immobilized pellets was primarily driven by ion exchange and complexation, which jointly contributed 73.56% (MRSB-pellet) to 78.62% (MSSB-pellet) of the total adsorption, while the mechanisms of chemical precipitation and physical adsorption could averagely contribute 6.91% (MSSB-pellet) and 11.24% (MRSB-pellet), respectively. Intracellular accumulation was comparably tiny among these mechanisms accounting for 4.30-5.92% of total biosorption; in turn, it would keep intracellular Cd2+ concentration below a toxic threshold to maintain cell activity. These suggested that magnetic biochar immobilized bacteria, particularly MRSB-pellet, could be used as an effective biosorbent to remove the Cd2+ from the growth medium. This study further deepened our understanding of biosorption process by microorganism immobilized onto magnetic biochar for the metal removal.

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