| Literature DB >> 30286344 |
Imran Ali1, Changsheng Peng2, Zahid M Khan3, Iffat Naz4, Muhammad Sultan5, Mohsin Ali6, Irfan A Abbasi1, Tariqul Islam1, Tong Ye1.
Abstract
Treatment of toxic and emerging pollutants (T&EPs) is increasing the threats to the survival of conventional wastewater treatment (WWTs) technologies. The high installation and operational costs of advanced treatment technologies have shifted the research interest to the development of economical and reliable technology for management of T&EPs. Thus, recently biogenic nanoparticles (BNPs) fabricated using microbes/microorganisms are getting tremendous research interest due to their unique properties (i.e. high specific surface area, desired morphology, catalytic reactivity) for the biodegradation and biosorption of T&EPs. In addition, BNPs can be manufactured using metal contaminated water which indicates a hidden potential for resource recovery and utilization. Therefore, the present study discusses the adsorptive and catalytic performance of BNPs in the removal of T&EPs from water (W) and wastewater (WW). In addition, inspired by the superior performance of BNPs in advance WWT, a model of BNPs based WWT resource recovery and utilization process is also proposed. Finally, main issues i.e. mass production, leaching, poisoning/toxicity, regeneration, reusability and fabrication costs and process optimization are discussed which are main hinders in the transfer of BNPs based WWT technologies from laboratory to commercial scale.Entities:
Keywords: Biogenic nanoparticles; Microbes; Treatment; Wastewater; Water
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30286344 DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2018.09.073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Manage ISSN: 0301-4797 Impact factor: 6.789