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Surface tailored organobentonite enhances bacterial proliferation and phenanthrene biodegradation under cadmium co-contamination

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Surface tailored organobentonite enhances bacterial proliferation and phenanthrene biodegradation under cadmium co-contamination. / Mandal, Asit; Biswas, Bhabananda; Sarkar, Binoy et al.
In: Science of the Total Environment, Vol. 550, 15.04.2016, p. 611-618.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Mandal A, Biswas B, Sarkar B, Patra AK, Naidu R. Surface tailored organobentonite enhances bacterial proliferation and phenanthrene biodegradation under cadmium co-contamination. Science of the Total Environment. 2016 Apr 15;550:611-618. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.01.164

Author

Mandal, Asit ; Biswas, Bhabananda ; Sarkar, Binoy et al. / Surface tailored organobentonite enhances bacterial proliferation and phenanthrene biodegradation under cadmium co-contamination. In: Science of the Total Environment. 2016 ; Vol. 550. pp. 611-618.

Bibtex

@article{3fc7908343354bee8c27d6d5b710ed65,
title = "Surface tailored organobentonite enhances bacterial proliferation and phenanthrene biodegradation under cadmium co-contamination",
abstract = "Co-contamination of soil and water with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) and heavy metals makes biodegradation of the former extremely challenging. Modified clay-modulated microbial degradation provides a novel insight in addressing this issue. This study was conducted to evaluate the growth and phenanthrene degradation performance of Mycobacterium gilvum VF1 in the presence of a palmitic acid (PA)-grafted Arquad{\textregistered} 2HT-75-based organobentonite in cadmium (Cd)-phenanthrene co-contaminated water. The PA-grafted organobentonite (ABP) adsorbed a slightly greater quantity of Cd than bentonite at up to 30 mg L-1 metal concentration, but its highly negative surface charge imparted by carboxylic groups indicated the potential of being a significantly superior adsorbent of Cd at higher metal concentrations. In systems co-contained with Cd (5 and 10 mg L-1), the Arquad{\textregistered} 2HT-75-modified bentonite (AB) and PA-grafted organobentonite (ABP) resulted in a significantly higher (72-78%) degradation of phenanthrene than bentonite (62%) by the bacterium. The growth and proliferation of bacteria were supported by ABP which not only eliminated Cd toxicity through adsorption but also created a congenial microenvironment for bacterial survival. The macromolecules produced during ABP-bacteria interaction could form a stable clay-bacterial cluster by overcoming the electrostatic repulsion among individual components. Findings of this study provide new insights for designing clay modulated PAH bioremediation technologies in mixed-contaminated water and soil.",
keywords = "Bioremediation, Clay-bacterial interaction, Heavy metal, Modified clay, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)",
author = "Asit Mandal and Bhabananda Biswas and Binoy Sarkar and Patra, {Ashok K.} and Ravi Naidu",
year = "2016",
month = apr,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.01.164",
language = "English",
volume = "550",
pages = "611--618",
journal = "Science of the Total Environment",
issn = "0048-9697",
publisher = "Elsevier Science B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Surface tailored organobentonite enhances bacterial proliferation and phenanthrene biodegradation under cadmium co-contamination

AU - Mandal, Asit

AU - Biswas, Bhabananda

AU - Sarkar, Binoy

AU - Patra, Ashok K.

AU - Naidu, Ravi

PY - 2016/4/15

Y1 - 2016/4/15

N2 - Co-contamination of soil and water with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) and heavy metals makes biodegradation of the former extremely challenging. Modified clay-modulated microbial degradation provides a novel insight in addressing this issue. This study was conducted to evaluate the growth and phenanthrene degradation performance of Mycobacterium gilvum VF1 in the presence of a palmitic acid (PA)-grafted Arquad® 2HT-75-based organobentonite in cadmium (Cd)-phenanthrene co-contaminated water. The PA-grafted organobentonite (ABP) adsorbed a slightly greater quantity of Cd than bentonite at up to 30 mg L-1 metal concentration, but its highly negative surface charge imparted by carboxylic groups indicated the potential of being a significantly superior adsorbent of Cd at higher metal concentrations. In systems co-contained with Cd (5 and 10 mg L-1), the Arquad® 2HT-75-modified bentonite (AB) and PA-grafted organobentonite (ABP) resulted in a significantly higher (72-78%) degradation of phenanthrene than bentonite (62%) by the bacterium. The growth and proliferation of bacteria were supported by ABP which not only eliminated Cd toxicity through adsorption but also created a congenial microenvironment for bacterial survival. The macromolecules produced during ABP-bacteria interaction could form a stable clay-bacterial cluster by overcoming the electrostatic repulsion among individual components. Findings of this study provide new insights for designing clay modulated PAH bioremediation technologies in mixed-contaminated water and soil.

AB - Co-contamination of soil and water with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) and heavy metals makes biodegradation of the former extremely challenging. Modified clay-modulated microbial degradation provides a novel insight in addressing this issue. This study was conducted to evaluate the growth and phenanthrene degradation performance of Mycobacterium gilvum VF1 in the presence of a palmitic acid (PA)-grafted Arquad® 2HT-75-based organobentonite in cadmium (Cd)-phenanthrene co-contaminated water. The PA-grafted organobentonite (ABP) adsorbed a slightly greater quantity of Cd than bentonite at up to 30 mg L-1 metal concentration, but its highly negative surface charge imparted by carboxylic groups indicated the potential of being a significantly superior adsorbent of Cd at higher metal concentrations. In systems co-contained with Cd (5 and 10 mg L-1), the Arquad® 2HT-75-modified bentonite (AB) and PA-grafted organobentonite (ABP) resulted in a significantly higher (72-78%) degradation of phenanthrene than bentonite (62%) by the bacterium. The growth and proliferation of bacteria were supported by ABP which not only eliminated Cd toxicity through adsorption but also created a congenial microenvironment for bacterial survival. The macromolecules produced during ABP-bacteria interaction could form a stable clay-bacterial cluster by overcoming the electrostatic repulsion among individual components. Findings of this study provide new insights for designing clay modulated PAH bioremediation technologies in mixed-contaminated water and soil.

KW - Bioremediation

KW - Clay-bacterial interaction

KW - Heavy metal

KW - Modified clay

KW - Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)

U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.01.164

DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.01.164

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26849325

AN - SCOPUS:84957549010

VL - 550

SP - 611

EP - 618

JO - Science of the Total Environment

JF - Science of the Total Environment

SN - 0048-9697

ER -