4.6 Article

Cadmium removal from contaminated soil by thermally responsive elastin (ELPEC20) Biopolymers

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 98, Issue 2, Pages 349-355

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/bit.21478

Keywords

soil washing; ex situ; chelators; EDTA; cadmium

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Cadmium contamination of soil is a major concern in the biosphere. Beyond the suite of available physico-chemical treatment methods, green and more efficient metal contaminanats to acceptable levels. Elastin-like poly-peptides (ELP) composed of a polyhistidine domain (ELPH12) can be used as an environmentally benign chelating agent for ex situ soil washing. However, ELPH12 us relatively non-selective. A biopolymer with metal-binding domains that have stronger affinity, capacity, and selectivity would have distinct advantages. The aim of this work is to investigate the use of a new generation of ELP biopolymer, ELPEC20, containing synthetic phytochelatin (EC) as the metal-binding domain for ex situ soil washing. ELPEC20 was shown to bind cadmium constant of ELPEC20 is an order of magnitude higher and the binding capacity is fivefold higher than ELPH12. In contrast to ELPH12, no decrease in cadmium binding was observed in the presence of other competing metal ions. The improved selectivity and binding capacity provided by ELPEC20 were directly reflected in the enhance cadmium extraction efficiency from contaminated soil. In batch washing studies up to 62% of the bound cadmium was removed by ELPH12. Cadmium was removed not only from the exchangable fraction but also the oxidizable fraction. The high-affinity binding sites of ELPEC20 also results in very rapid extraction with complete removal achieved within 1 h, suggesting that ELPEC20 could be used as part of a rapid (Short retention time) technology with minimum possibility for the biodegradation of biopolymers.

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