| Literature DB >> 28330194 |
Ali Hussain1, Ali Hasan2, Arshad Javid2, Javed Iqbal Qazi3.
Abstract
A variety of multidimensional anthropogenic activities, especially of industrial level, are contaminating our aquatic and terrestrial environments with a variety of metallic and non-metallic pollutants. The metallic and non-metallic pollutants addressed specifically in this review are heavy metals and various compound forms of sulfates, respectively. Direct and indirect deleterious effects of the both types of pollutants to all forms of life are well-known. The treatment of such pollutants is therefore much necessary before their final discharge into the environment. This review summarizes the productive utility of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) for economical and concomitant treatment of the above mentioned wastes. Utilization of agro-industrial wastes and some environmental contaminants including hydrocarbons, as economical growth substrates for SRB, is also suggested and proved efficient in this review. Mechanistically, SRB will utilize sulfates as their terminal electron acceptors during respiration while utilizing agro-industrial and/or hydrocarbon wastes as electron donors/carbon sources and generate H2S. The biogenic H2S will then react vigorously with dissolved metals present in the wastewaters thus forming metal sulfide. The metal sulfide being water insoluble and heavier than water will settle down in the water as precipitates. In this way, three types of pollutants i.e., metals, sulfates and agro-industrial and/or hydrocarbon wastes will be treated simultaneously.Entities:
Keywords: Agro-industrial wastes; Beneficial microorganisms; Bioprecipitation; Economical bioremediation; Sulfate-reducing bacteria; Toxic metals
Year: 2016 PMID: 28330194 PMCID: PMC4902799 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-016-0437-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Health effects of most commonly encountering heavy metals and their industrial sources of generation
| Metal | Generation sources | Principal health hazards |
|---|---|---|
| Aluminium | Aluminium alloys’ production, packaging units, pharmaceutical industries | Aerial occupational exposure may produce lung fibrosis in humans |
| Cadmium | Alloys’ production, automotive and air craft industries, electroplating/galvanizing, metallurgical processing, mining, nickel–cadmium battery manufacturing industries, paint industries, plastic industries, textile printing | Affects the activity of alcohol dehydrogenase, arylsulfatase, delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase, delta-aminolevulinic acid synthetase, lipoamide dehydrogenase, pyruvate decarboxylase and pyruvate dehydrogenase |
| Chromium | Cement manufacturing, chemical and refractory processing, chrome-plating, combustion of fossil fuels, ferrochrome production, metal-finishing industries, ore refineries, tanneries, textile plants | Low-level chronic exposure leads to kidney damage while occupational exposure may leads to asthma as well as cancer of the respiratory tract especially in the chrome production and chrome pigment industries |
| Cobalt | Cemented tungsten carbide industry, high temperature alloys’ manufacturing, paint industry | Exposure to low concentrations (0.002 to 0.01 mg/m3) causes respiratory irritation while to higher concentrations (0.1 mg/m3 or higher) can lead to “hard metal” pneumoconiosis |
| Copper | Copper mining, metal fumes from smelting operations, welding | Excessive accumulation leads to Wilson’s disease |
| Iron | Hematite mining industries, metal industries, welding | Inhalation of iron oxide fumes or dust may leads to deposition of iron particles in lungs which produces an X-ray appearance like silicosis |
| Lead | Combustion of lead containing industrial emissions, glass polishing, hand loading of ammunition, jewelry making, lead-glazed pottery, painting, plastic industry, rubber industry, stained glass crafting | Deleterious effects include abdominal cramps, anorexia, insomnia, muscle aches, nausea, serious injuries to brain and kidneys, weakness of joints and weight loss |
| Manganese | Iron industry, welding | Chronic poisoning leads to a neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by difficulty in walking, irritability, speech disturbances and compulsive behaviour which may include fighting, running and singing |
| Mercury | Chlor-alkali industry, extraction of gold, in dentistry as amalgam tooth filling, paper industry, pulp manufacturing industry, smelting operations | Associated with kidney damage and its chronic poisoning may cause anemia, excessive irritation of tissues, gingivitis, loss of appetite, nutritional disturbances and salivation |
| Nickel | Combustion of fossil fuels, electroplating, fumes from alloys used in welding and brazing, metal plating industries, nickel mining, nickel-refining industries | Acts as a respiratory tract carcinogen |
| Zinc | Coal and waste combustion, mining, steel processing | Acute zinc toxicity leads to gastrointestinal distress and diarrhoea while inhalation of freshly formed fumes of zinc may cause metal fume fever |
Literature adapted from these authors’ publications (Goyer and Clarkson 2001; Landis and Yu 2004; Scragg 2006; Becker et al. 2010)
Fig. 1Routes 1, 2 and 3 represent the present situation of untreated sewage, metal and sulfate containing industrial effluents, respectively while routes 4A and 4B indicate two different possible bioremediating fates of metals and H2S and metals and other sulfate pollutants, respectively. In route 4B SRB growth is accomplished by agro-industrial and/or hydrocarbon wastes