| Literature DB >> 25029542 |
Rita de Cássia F S Silva1, Darne G Almeida2, Raquel D Rufino3, Juliana M Luna4, Valdemir A Santos5, Leonie Asfora Sarubbo6.
Abstract
Petroleum hydrocarbons are important energy resources. However, petroleum is also a major pollutant of the environment. Contamination by oil and oil products has caused serious harm, and increasing attention has been paid to the development and implementation of innovative technologies for the removal of these contaminants. Biosurfactants have been extensively used in the remediation of water and soil, as well as in the main stages of the oil production chain, such as extraction, transportation, and storage. This diversity of applications is mainly due to advantages such as biodegradability, low toxicity and better functionality under extreme conditions in comparison to synthetic counterparts. Moreover, biosurfactants can be obtained with the use of agro-industrial waste as substrate, which helps reduce overall production costs. The present review describes the potential applications of biosurfactants in the oil industry and the remediation of environmental pollution caused by oil spills.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25029542 PMCID: PMC4139858 DOI: 10.3390/ijms150712523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Patents on biosurfactants produced by microorganisms.
| Microorganism/Type of Biosurfactant | Patent Holder | Title of Patent | Publication No. | Publication Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sophorolipid producer | Borzeix F | Sophorolipids as stimulating agent of dermal fibroblast metabolism | US 6057302 A | 2 May 2000 |
| Sophorolipid producer | Borzeix F, Concaix | Use of sophorolipids comprising diacetyl lactones as agent for stimulating skin fibroblast metabolism | US 6596265 B1 | 22 July 2003 |
| New strains of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria capable of producing biosurfactants | Robin L. Brigmon, Sandra Story, Denis Altman, Christopher J. Berry | Surfactant biocatalyst for remediation of recalcitrant organics and heavy metals | PI 0519962-0 A2 | 28 June 2005 |
| Sophorolipid producer | Gross RA, Shah V, Doncel GF | Spermicidal and virucidal properties of various forms of sophorolipids | WO 2005089522 A2 | 29 September 2005 |
| Awada S, Spendlove R, Awada M | Microbial biosurfactants as agents for controlling pests | US 20050266036 A1 | 1 December 2005 | |
| Silvanito Alves Barbosa, Roberto Rodrigues De Souza | Biosurfactant production for development of biodegradable detergent | PI 1102592-1 A2 | 16 May 2011 | |
| Sophorolipid producer | Cox TF, Crawford RJ, Gregory LG, Hosking SL, Kotsakis | Mild to skin, foaming detergent composition | WO2011120776 A1 | 6 October 2011 |
| Ana LF Porto, Eduardo F Santos, Leonie A Sarubbo | Biosurfactant and production process | PI 1105951-6 A2 | 28 November 2011 | |
| Leonie A Sarubbo, Valdemir A Santos, Raquel D Rufino, Juliana M Luna | Production process of biosurfactant produced by | BR102012023115 | 13 September 2012 | |
| Soetaert W, De MS, Saerens K, Roelants S, Van BI | Modified sophorolipid production by yeast strains and uses | EP 2580321 A1 | 17 April 2013 | |
| Lipopeptide producer | X. Vecino, R. Dvesa-Rey, J.M. Cruz, A.B. Moldes | Method for separating the surfactants present in the washing liquors of corn and uses | WO2014044876 A1 | 27 March 2014 |
Waste and byproducts used for biosurfactant production and respective producing microorganisms.
| Waste/by-Product | Biosurfactant-Producing Microorganism | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Canola waste frying oil and corn steep liquor | [ | |
| Glycerol | [ | |
| Clarified cashew apple juice | [ | |
| Vinasse and waste frying oil |
| [ |
| Cassava wastewater | [ | |
| Soybean oil refinery residue and corn steep liquor | [ | |
| Ground-nut oil refinery residue and corn steep liquor | [ | |
| Animal fat and corn steep liquor | [ | |
| Vegetable fat | [ | |
| Waste frying oil | [ | |
| Molasses | [ |
Main classes of biosurfactants and respective producer microorganisms.
| Class/Type of Biosurfactant | Microorganisms | |
|---|---|---|
| Rhamnolipids | ||
| Sophorolipids | ||
| Trehalolipids | ||
| Peptide-lipid |
| |
| Viscosin | ||
| Serrawettin | ||
| Surfactin | ||
| Subtilisin | ||
| Gramicidin | ||
| Polymyxin | ||
| Fatty acid | ||
| Neutral lipids | ||
| Phospholipids | ||
| Emulsan | ||
| Biodispersan | ||
| Liposan | ||
| Carbohydrate-lipid-protein | ||
| Mannan-lipid-protein | ||
| Vesicles | ||
Biosurfactants, producing microorganisms and uses in the bioremediation of oil-contaminated environments.
| Microorganisms | Type of Biosurfactant | Applications |
|---|---|---|
| Glucolipid and trehalose lipid | Oil spill cleanup operations | |
| Rhamnolipid | Bioremediation of oil-contaminated sites | |
| Lipopeptide | Bioremediation of marine oil pollution. | |
| Glycolipid | Bioremediation applications | |
| Lipopeptide | Bioremediation of hydrocarbon-contaminated sites | |
|
| Lipopeptide | Environmental applications. |
| Rhamnolipid | Bioremediation of hydrocarbon-contaminated sites | |
| Trehalose tetraester | Bioremediation of oil-contaminated environments | |
| Lipopeptide | Bioremediation | |
| Rhamnolipid | Environmental applications | |
|
| Rhamnolipid | Environmental applications |
| Glycolipid | Bioremediation of marine environment | |
|
| Mannosylerythritol lipid | Bioremediation of marine environment |
|
| Glycolipid | Bioremediation of marine oil pollution |
| Rhamnolipid | Bioremediation of marine and soil environments | |
|
| Sophorolipids | Environmental applications |
| Protein-carboydrate-lipid complex | Oil recovery from sand | |
| Sophorolipids | Oil recovery | |
| Sophorolipids | Oil removal | |
| Protein-carboydrate-lipid complex | Removal of oil from sand | |
| Sophorolipids | Control of environmental oil pollution | |
| Protein-carboydrate-lipid complex | Bioremediation processes | |
| Protein-carboydrate-lipid complex | Oil removal | |
| Glycolipid complex | Removal of petroleum derivate motor oil from sand | |
| Protein-carboydrate-lipid complex | Removal of petroleum and motor oil adsorbed to sand | |
| Sophorolipids | Removal of petroleum and motor oil adsorbed to sand | |
| Protein-carboydrate-lipid complex | Oil removal |
Common applications of biosurfactants in the petroleum industry.
| Step in Petroleum Production Chain | Applications |
|---|---|
| Reservoir wettability modification | |
| Oil viscosity reduction | |
| Drilling mud | |
| Paraffin/asphalt deposition control | |
| Enhanced oil displacement | |
| Oil viscosity reduction | |
| Oil viscosity reduction | |
| Oil emulsion stabilization | |
| Paraffin/asphalt deposition | |
| Oil viscosity reduction | |
| Oily sludge emulsification | |
| Hydrocarbon dispersion |
Results of toxicity tests of (bio)surfactants, dispersants, crude oils, and dispersant/crude oil mixtures to vegetables and organisms.
| Test Compound | Organisms/Vegetables Test | Toxicity | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emulsan |
| LC50 (200 mg/L) | [ |
| Emulsan |
| LC50 (300 mg/L) | [ |
|
| 86% GI | [ | |
|
| LC50 (600 mg/L) | [ | |
|
| no toxicity | [ | |
|
| no toxicity | [ | |
|
| no toxicity | [ | |
|
| no toxicity | [ | |
|
| 80% GI | [ | |
|
| LC50 (525 mg/L) | [ | |
| Dodecylbenzene sulfonate/LAS |
| LC50 (1.45 mg/L) | [ |
| Lauryl sulfate/SDS |
| LC50 (0.36 mg/L) | [ |
| Triton X-100 |
| LC50 (3.3 mg/L) | [ |
| Triton X-100 |
| LC50 (2.5 mg/L) | [ |
| Lauryl sulfate/SDS |
| LC50 (18–23 mg/L) | [ |
| Lauryl sulfate/SDS |
| LC50 (10 mg/L) | [ |
| Corexit 9500 |
| LC50 (13.4 mg/L) | [ |
| Corexit 9500 |
| LC50 (75.7 mg/L) | [ |
| Corexit 9500 |
| 13% surviving | [ |
| Corexit 9500 |
| 0% surviving | [ |
| Corexit 9500 |
| 42 (mg/L) | [ |
| Corexit 9500 |
| 130 (mg/L) | [ |
| Corexit 9500 | LC50 (0.447 mg/L) | [ | |
| Corexit 9500 |
| LC50 (14.2 mg/L) | [ |
| BP Horizon source oil |
| 67% surviving | [ |
| BP Horizon source oil |
| 27% surviving | [ |
| Louisiana sweet crude oil |
| LC50 (2.7 mg/L) | [ |
| Louisiana sweet crude oil |
| LC50 (3.5 mg/L) | [ |
| Macondo sweet crude oil |
| LC50 (2.47 mg/L) | [ |
| Macondo sweet crude oil | LC50 (19.3 mg/L) | [ | |
| Corexit 9500/BP Horizon source oil |
| 67% surviving | [ |
| Corexit 9500/BP Horizon source oil |
| 20% surviving | [ |
| Corexit 9500/Louisiana sweet crude oil |
| LC50 (5.4 mg/L) | [ |
| Corexit 9500/Louisiana sweet crude oil |
| LC50 (7.6 mg/L) | [ |
| 1:10 Corexit 9500/Macondo sweet crude oil |
| 0.21 (mg/L) | [ |
| 1:50 Corexit 9500/Macondo sweet crude oil |
| 0.23 (mg/L) | [ |
GI: germination index; LC50: concentration lethal to 50% of the test species.