4.5 Article

Bioleaching of Heavy Metals from Printed Circuit Boards with an Acidophilic Iron-Oxidizing Microbial Consortium in Stirred Tank Reactors

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9020079

Keywords

printed circuit boards; heavy metals; acidophilic iron-oxidizing bacterial consortium; metals tolerance; bioleaching

Funding

  1. Canon Minero of the Universidad Nacional de San Agustin of Arequipa, Peru [IBA-0030-2017-UNSA]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [91751204]
  3. national funds through FCT-Foundation for Science and Technology [UIDB/04423/2020, UIDP/04423/2020]

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The study demonstrated that an acidophilic iron-oxidizing bacterial consortium enriched from a gold mine in Peru has a high efficiency in recovering copper and zinc from printed circuit boards residues.
In this study, bioleaching was carried out for the recovery of metals (copper, zinc, tin, lead, gold and silver) from printed circuit boards residues (PCBs), one of the most important wastes from electrical and electronic equipment, using an acidophilic iron-oxidizing bacterial consortium enriched with minerals from a gold mine in the Arequipa region, Peru. High-throughput sequencing and analysis of the 16S rRNA biomarker revealed that this consortium was predominantly composed of Tissierella, Acidiphilium and Leptospirillum bacteria, from which the latter is known to grow by chemolithotrophy through iron oxidation. After the enrichment process, the acidophilic iron-oxidizing consortium was first tested for its tolerance to different PCBs concentrations, showing best growth up to 10 g/L of PCBs and a tolerance index of 0.383. Based on these results, the bioleaching efficiency of the consortium was investigated for 10 g/L of PCBs in stirred tank reactors coupled to an aeration system, for 18 days. High bioleaching efficiencies were achieved for copper and zinc (69% and 91%, respectively), indicating that these two metals can be easily extracted in this leaching system. Lower extraction efficiencies were achieved for tin (16%) and gold (28%), while for lead and silver only a residual recovery (<0.25%) was detected. These results indicate that the enriched bacterial consortium originating from the Arequipa region, Peru, has a high capacity to recover different metals of economic importance.

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