| Literature DB >> 24194735 |
Navdeep K Dhami1, M Sudhakara Reddy, Abhijit Mukherjee.
Abstract
Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICCP) is a naturally occurring biological process in which microbes produce inorganic materials as part of their basic metabolic activities. This technology has been widely explored and promising with potential in various technical applications. In the present review, the detailed mechanism of production of calcium carbonate biominerals by ureolytic bacteria has been discussed along with role of bacteria and the sectors where these biominerals are being used. The applications of bacterially produced carbonate biominerals for improving the durability of buildings, remediation of environment (water and soil), sequestration of atmospheric CO2 filler material in rubbers and plastics etc. are discussed. The study also sheds light on benefits of bacterial biominerals over traditional agents and also the issues that lie in the path of successful commercialization of the technology of microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation from lab to field scale.Entities:
Keywords: bacteria; biofilm; biomineralization; calcite; extrapolymeric substances; urease
Year: 2013 PMID: 24194735 PMCID: PMC3810791 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2013.00314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Bio-mineralization of calcium carbonates in natural structures (A) Corals (B) Ant hills (C) Limestone caves (.
Figure 2Bacteria serving as nucleation site for CaCO.
Reaction conditions reported in the literature for production of CaCO.
| Sr90 sequestration | 333 | 25 | 0.045 | Fujita et al., |
| Sr90 sequestration | 330 | 0.025 | 0.042 | Warren et al., |
| Removal of Ca2+ from waste water | 16 | 14 | 0.293 | Hammes et al., |
| Removal of Ca2+ from waste water | 8 | 15 | 0.032 | Hammes, |
| Stone remediation | 333 | 12–50 | 0.110 | Stocks-Fischer et al., |
| 333 | 340 | 0.02–0.12 | De Muynck et al., | |
| Stone remediation | 66 | 25 | 0.041 | Bachmeier et al., |
| Portland cement remediation | 333 | 50 | n/s | Ramachandran, |
| Plugging of rock pores | 333 | 0.25 | n/s | Gollapudi et al., |
| Biocementation | 1500 | 1500 | 4–18 | Whiffin, |
| Sand column cementation | 333 | 25 | 0.65 | Achal et al., |
| Soil cementation | 1000 | 1000 | n/s | Cheng et al., |
| Biodeposition | 333 | 340 | n/s | De Belie and De Muynck, |
| Carbonate precipitation | 666 | 250 | n/s | Okwadha and Li, |
Figure 3Polymorphs of CaCO.
Figure 4Image of a cemented sand body from a large scale biogrout experiment. Van Paassen et al. (.
Overview of different applications where microbial calcite is used as biocement in cementitious materials.
| Cement mortar | Nutrical | Calcite bioconcept Le Metayer-Levrel et al., | |
| SF | Stocks-Fischer et al., | ||
| Remediation of cracks in concrete | Growth and biocementation medium | De Belie and De Muynck, | |
| SF | Ramachandran, | ||
| Sterile | Ghosh et al., | ||
| CSL urea medium, LML urea medium NB urea medium | Mukherjee et al., | ||
| Self-healing | Calcium lactate | Jonkers, |
Overview of different methodologies where microbial calcite has been deposited as a layer on surface of stone.
| Culture in exponential phase: 107 to 109 cells/ ml | Spraying | Spraying (5 times) | Water absorption, SEM analysis, surface roughness, colorimetery and plate count | Calcite bioconcept Le Metayer-Levrel et al., |
| Overnight culture 106 cells cm−2 | Brushing on water saturated specimens | Wetting every day for 15 days | Water absorption, colorimeteric measurements, stone cohesion | Tiano et al., |
| 2% Inoculums | Immersion in growing bacterial culture (shaking or stationary conditions) for 30 days | Stone cohesion, weight increase, XRD and SEM analysis, porosimetery analysis | Rodriguez-Navarro et al., | |
| 1% Inoculums | Immersion in growing bacterial culture (intermediate wetting) for 28 days | Water absorption, SEM analysis | Dick et al., | |
| 108 cells ml−1 | Spraying | In Carbogel | Water absorption and drying due to evaporation | May, |
| n.d. | n.d. | Immersion in test solution or spraying ( | Water absorption, colorimeteric measurements, stone cohesion, staining of newly formed calcite with Alizarin Red S and Calcein | Tiano et al., |
| Overnight culture 107 to 109 cells ml−1 | Immersion for 1 day | Immersion for 4 days | Weight increase, water absorption, gas permeability, chloride migration, carbonation, freezing and thawing, SEM and XRD analysis | De Muynck et al., |
n.d., not defined.
Energy in basic building materials (Reddy and Jagadish, .
| Cement | 5.85 |
| Lime | 5.63 |
| Lime Pozollana | 2.33 |
| Steel | 42 |
| Aluminium | 236.8 |
| Glass | 25.8 |
Different types and sources of solid wastes and their recycling and utilization potentials for construction materials (adapted from Pappu et al., .
| Industrial waste (inorganic) | Coal combustion residues, fly ash, steel slag, construction debris | Bricks, blocks, tiles, cement, paint, fine and coarse aggregates, concrete, wood substitute products, ceramic products |
| Agro waste (organic) | Baggage, rice and wheat straw and husk, saw mill waste, ground nut shell, jute, sisal, cotton stalk | Cement boards, particle boards, insulation boards, wall panels, roof sheets, binder, fibrous building panels, bricks, acid proof cement, coir fiber, reinforced composites, polymer composites |
| Mining/ mineral wastes | Coal washeries waste, mining waste tailing from iron, copper, zinc, gold industries | Bricks, fine and coarse lightweight aggregates, tiles |
| Non-hazardous waste | Waste gypsum, lime sludge, lime stone waste, broken glass and ceramics | Blocks, bricks, cement clinker, hydraulic binder, fibrous gypsum boards, gypsum plaster, super sulfated cement |
| Hazardous waste | Contaminated blasting materials, galvanizing waste, metallurgical residues, sludge from waste water and waste water treatment plants | Boards, bricks, cement, ceramics, tiles |