| Literature DB >> 18312630 |
Ireri V Robles-González1, Fabio Fava, Héctor M Poggi-Varaldo.
Abstract
The aim of this work is to present a critical review on slurry bioreactors (SB) and their application to bioremediation of soils and sediments polluted with recalcitrant and toxic compounds. The scope of the review encompasses the following subjects: (i) process fundamentals of SB and analysis of advantages and disadvantages; (ii) the most recent applications of SB to laboratory scale and commercial scale soil bioremediation, with a focus on pesticides, explosives, polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons, and chlorinated organic pollutants; (iii) trends on the use of surfactants to improve availability of contaminants and supplementation with degradable carbon sources to enhance cometabolism of pollutants; (iv) recent findings on the utilization of electron acceptors other than oxygen; (v) bioaugmentation and advances made on characterization of microbial communities of SB; (vi) developments on ecotoxicity assays aimed at evaluating bioremediation efficiency of the process.From this review it can be concluded that SB is an effective ad situ and ex situ technology that can be used for bioremediation of problematic sites, such as those characterized by soils with high contents of clay and organic matter, by pollutants that are recalcitrant, toxic, and display hysteretic behavior, or when bioremediation should be accomplished in short times under the pressure and monitoring of environmental agencies and regulators. SB technology allows for the convenient manipulation and control of several environmental parameters that could lead to enhanced and faster treatment of polluted soils: nutrient N, P and organic carbon source (biostimulation), inocula (bioaugmentation), increased availability of pollutants by use of surfactants or inducing biosurfactant production inside the SB, etc. An interesting emerging area is the use of SB with simultaneous electron acceptors, which has demonstrated its usefulness for the bioremediation of soils polluted with hydrocarbons and some organochlorinated compounds. Characterization studies of microbial communities of SB are still in the early stages, in spite of their significance for improving reactor operation and design optimization.We have identified the following niches of research needs for SB in the near and mid term future, inter alia: (i) application of SB with sequential and simultaneous electron acceptors to soils polluted with contaminants other than hydrocarbons (i.e., pesticides, explosives, etc.), (ii) evaluation of the technical feasibility of triphasic SB that use innocuous solvents to help desorbing pollutants strongly attached to soils, and in turn, to enhance their biodegradation, (iii) gaining deeper insight of microbial communities present in SB with the intensified application of molecular biology tools such as PCR-DGGE, PCR-TGGE, ARDRA, etc., (iv) development of more representative ecotoxicological assays to better assess the effectiveness of a given bioremediation process.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18312630 PMCID: PMC2292675 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-7-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Figure 1Flow diagram of a typical slurry bioreactor installation. Clarifier is optional.
Remediation of sites/actual site soils contaminated with PAH in aerobic slurry bioreactors.
| Soil | PAHa: | a) without surfactant | a) 63% | [106] |
| Soil | PAHsa | - | 93% | [92] |
| Soil | PAHsa: | - PAH-degrading consortium | a) 19 mg L-1 day-1 | [40] |
| Soil | PAHsa | a) Clay soil | a) 43% | [41] |
| Estuarine sediments | PAHa | a) Mixed system | a) 25 – 40% | [38] |
| Soil | PAHa | 100% | [107] | |
| Waste sludges | PAHsa | Petroleum waste sludges | 90% | [33] |
| Soil | PAHa | a) 96% | [9] | |
| Actual site soil | Complex mixture of PAHsa(~13.0 g/kg) | Slurry-phase in the absence and presence of soya lecithin or humic substances at 1.5% w/w | 25% (without agents) 58% (with agents) | [11] |
| Actual site soil | Complex mixture of PAHsa (~3.7 g/kg) | Comparison SB, blade agitated bioreactor and rotary vessel bioreactor | SB was capable of the readiest and fastest removal of soil PAHs | [8] |
| Soil | PAHa Fluorene | 90% | [108] | |
| a) Pristine sediment | a) supplemented with PAHsa: | a) 100% | [39] |
Notes: aPAHs: Polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons
Remediation of sites/actual site soils contaminated with pesticides and PCBs in aerobic slurry bioreactors.
| Matrix | Contaminant | Remarks | Removal | Ref. |
| Waste activated sludge | EPTCa (5 – 6 ppm) | a) freely suspended activated sludge | a)35% | [109] |
| Agricultural soil | γ-HCHb | Inoculated with | 65% | [48] |
| Soil | a) PCBsc (1210 mg/kg) | Rhamnolipid production was observed by | a) 98% | [49] |
| Actual site contaminated soil | PCBsc (1547 mg/kg) | Inoculated with ECO3 co-culture | 21% (without inoculum) | [47] |
| Actual site contaminated Soil | PCBsc (1547 mg/kg) | Inoculated with ECO3 co-culture; optimization of SR configuration | 18% (in shake flasks with baffles) | [14] |
| Actual site contaminated Soil | PCBsc (350 mg/kg) | Inoculated with ECO3 co-culture in the absence and the presence of Cyclodextrins, Quillaya Saponin, Triton X-100 | 65% (without agents) 80% (with agents) | [46] |
| Soil | 2,4-De (300 mg/kg) | With and without sucrose | >90% | [30] |
| Soil | DEPf (8 mg/g) | a) with native soil microflora | a) 47.9% | [22] |
Notes: aS-ethyl dipropylthiocarbamate; bγ-hexaclhorocyclohexane; cPolychlrorinated byphenyls; dTotal petroleum hydrocarbons; e2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid; fdi-ethyl phthalate
Remediation of sites/actual site contaminated with explosives in aerobic slurry bioreactors.
| Matrix | Contaminant | Remarks | Removal | Ref. |
| Soil from Joliet Army Ammunition Plant | 2,4,6-TNT a | Addition of molasses | 90% | [12] |
| Soils from Army Ammunition Plant | a) 2,4-DNT b (14715 mg/kg) 2,6-DNTc (8940 mg/kg) | Augmentation with a DNT-mineralizing culture | 98% | [5] |
| Soil | 2,4,6 trinitrophenylmethylnitramined | - | 99% | [110] |
| Soil | 2,4,6-TNTa | - | 40% | [111] |
Notas: a2,4,6-trinitrotoluene; b2,4,6-trinitrobenzene
Anaerobic slurry bioreactors.
| Matrix | Contaminant | Remarks | Removal | Ref. |
| Soil | 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo- | With anaerobic activated sludge as the microbial inocula and sludge cakes as the primary substrates | 86% | [112] |
| Soil | Chlorpyrifos | Sequencing batch mode (anoxic-aerobic-anoxic) | 91% | [113] |
| Soil | Hexahydro-1,2,3-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX) | With supplementation of municipal anaerobic sludge as an exogenous source of microorganisms | 60% | [114] |
| sediment | PAH Acenaphthene | Addition sulfate as an electron acceptor enhanced PAH degradation | 79% | [115] |
| Soil | αβδ and γ-hexachlorocyclohexane | Bioaugmented with anaerobic sludge | 100% | [68] |
| Soil | 2-sec-butil-2,6-dinitrofenol (DINOSEB) | Pilot scale | 51% | [55] |
| Soil | 2,4-dichlorophenoxy-acetic acid | Sulfate reduction conditions with addition of sucrose | 48% | [30,31] |
| Soil | Pentachlorophenol (PCP) | Bioaugmented with cells of | 100% | [87] |
| Soil | Trinitrotoluene (TNT) | Augmentation with anaerobic biomass from a food industry wastewater treatment plant | 100% | [116] |
| Soil | Diesel | a)mixed electron acceptor (SO4=, NO3-, CO2) | a)80% | [29] |
| Soil | Tetrachloroethylene | Bioaugmented with cells of | 100% | [117] |
Biphasic and triphasic bioreactors for treatment of hydrophobic organic pollutants (adapted from [78]).
| Styrene | Mixed culture | silicone oil |
| Phenantrhene | 2,2,4,4,6,8,8-heptametilnonane | |
| Naphthalene | Decane, dodecane, hexadecane | |
| Various PAHs | Mixed culture | silicone oil |
| 2,4,6-trichlorophenol | silicone oil | |
| Dioxins | Mixed culture | Decane |
| Pentaclorophenol | Diethyl sebacate | |
| Phenol | 2-undecanone | |
| Phenanthrene | silicone oil | |
| Benzene | Hexadecane | |
| Benzene | 1-octadecane | |
| Benzene | Hexadecane |