| Literature DB >> 33167607 |
Sing Chuong Chuo1,2, Sarajul Fikri Mohamed2, Siti Hamidah Mohd Setapar1,3, Akil Ahmad1,3, Mohammad Jawaid4, Waseem A Wani5, Asim Ali Yaqoob6, Mohamad Nasir Mohamad Ibrahim6.
Abstract
Nowadays, microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICP) has received great attention for its potential in construction and geotechnical applications. This technique has been used in biocementation of sand, consolidation of soil, production of self-healing concrete or mortar, and removal of heavy metal ions from water. The products of MICP often have enhanced strength, durability, and self-healing ability. Utilization of the MICP technique can also increase sustainability, especially in the construction industry where a huge portion of the materials used is not sustainable. The presence of bacteria is essential for MICP to occur. Bacteria promote the conversion of suitable compounds into carbonate ions, change the microenvironment to favor precipitation of calcium carbonate, and act as precipitation sites for calcium carbonate crystals. Many bacteria have been discovered and tested for MICP potential. This paper reviews the bacteria used for MICP in some of the most recent studies. Bacteria that can cause MICP include ureolytic bacteria, non-ureolytic bacteria, cyanobacteria, nitrate reducing bacteria, and sulfate reducing bacteria. The most studied bacterium for MICP over the years is Sporosarcina pasteurii. Other bacteria from Bacillus species are also frequently investigated. Several factors that affect MICP performance are bacterial strain, bacterial concentration, nutrient concentration, calcium source concentration, addition of other substances, and methods to distribute bacteria. Several suggestions for future studies such as CO2 sequestration through MICP, cost reduction by using plant or animal wastes as media, and genetic modification of bacteria to enhance MICP have been put forward.Entities:
Keywords: bacteria; biocementation; construction; microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33167607 PMCID: PMC7664203 DOI: 10.3390/ma13214993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICP) process for biocementation of sand.
Figure 2Schematic diagram for self-healing of biocement.
MICP with Sporosarcina pasteurii for sand and soil improvement.
| Ingredients | Structure and Properties after MICP | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Sand, clay | Increased tensile strength (40.8 kPa) and compressibility, decreased permeability (0.53 × 10−7 m/s) | [ |
| Ottawa silica sand | Unconfined compressive strength (UCS) 1.3 MPa, flexure strength 0.95 MPa | [ |
| Sand, metakaolin, OPC | OPC-MICP has best properties with UCS 1.2 MPa, water absorption 8% | [ |
| Sand, PVA fiber | Highest UCS 1.6 MPa, highest splitting tensile strength 440 kPa, lowest permeability 1.05 × 10−5 m/s | [ |
| Sand | Highest CS 3.29 MPa | [ |
| Desert aeolian sand | Highest UCS 18 MPa, lowest permeability 0.92 × 10−8 m/s | [ |
| Medium/fine sand | UCS 1.74 MPa, durability and water stability increased | [ |
| Poorly graded course sand | UCS 525 kPa | [ |
| Poorly graded sandy soil | UCS 400 kPa | [ |
| Sandy soil | UCS 625 kPa, permeability 1.8 × 10−7 m/s | [ |
| Sandy soil | Highest 6.4 MPa after 4 treatments, permeability 1.0 × 10−5 m/s | [ |
Construction materials made by MICP with Sporosarcina pasteurii.
| Materials | Structure and Properties after MICP | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Bio-brick from silica rich masonry sand | Highest CS 2.2 MPa | [ |
| Red brick (treatment) | CS 7.54 MPa, reduce water absorption by 49% after treatment | [ |
| Concrete with light weight aggregates | Highest CS 40 MPa, lowest water absorption 5% | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Highest CS 39.6 MPa, tensile strength 37% higher than normal mortar | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Highest UCS 43 MPa, lowest water absorption 2.5% | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Highest UCS 44 MPa | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Highest CS 54/70 MPa at 7/28 days curing | [ |
| Bio-mortar with superplasticizers | Crack width healed 0.35 mm | [ |
| Bio-cement | CS 42 MPa, water absorption 21% | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Crack width healed 0.41 mm, water adsorption restored 95%, CS restored 84% | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Crack width healed 0.27 mm, CS restored 63% | [ |
| Bio-mortar with fiber and zeolite as bacteria carriers | CS 70/100 MPa at 7/270 days | [ |
| Geopolymer | Self-healing observed in 1 month old sample | [ |
Materials produced using MICP with Bacillus sphaericus.
| Material | Structure Properties after MICP | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Bio-mortar with biochar, superabsorbent polymer, polypropylene fiber | CS 35–60 MPa, flexure strength 9–12 MPa | [ |
| Bio-concrete with fly ash | Highest CS 32.5 MPa, highest tensile strength 4.1 MPa, highest flexure strength 3.5 MPa | [ |
| Bio-concrete with fly ash | CS 30–40 MPa, tensile strength 2.9–5.0 MPa | [ |
| Bonding repair mortar | Highest slant shear strength 17 MPa | [ |
| Industrial ceramic aggregates (treatment) | Water absorption 6–16%, weight gained 3–7% | [ |
Materials produced using MICP with Bacillus megaterium.
| Material | Structure and Properties after MICP | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Treat sand column with varying grain size | Up to 30% CaCO3 formation | [ |
| Bio-concrete with recycled aggregates, nanosilica | Water absorption 5%, void volume 10% | [ |
| Bio-mortar | Highest CS 36 MPa, permeability 5 × 10−5 m/s | [ |
Materials produced using MICP with Bacillus subtilis.
| Material | Structure and Properties after MICP | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Bio-mortar | Highest CS 50 MPa, lowest water absorption 5% | [ |
| Bio-concrete | Highest CS 44 MPa | [ |
| Bio-shotcrete | Highest CS 34 MPa, highest tensile strength 3.4 MPa, lowest water absorption 6.2% | [ |
| Sand column | UCS 1.69 MPa, permeability 1.06 × 10−5 m/s | [ |
Biocementation of sand and soil through MICP.
| Bacteria | Sand/Soil | Cementation Solution | Performance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sandy soil | 2 M urea + | UCS = 1.69 MPa | [ | |
| Ottawa silica sand | 0.5 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 1.30 MPa | [ | |
| Commercial sand + white kaolin clay | 0.5 M (urea + CaCl2) | Tensile strength = 0.04 MPa | [ | |
| Desert aeolian sand | 2.5 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 18 MPa | [ | |
| Natural SiO2 sand | 1.0 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS 1.74 MPa | [ | |
| Ottawa silica sand | 0.75 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 6.4 MPa | [ | |
| Poorly graded medium sand | 1.0 M (urea + CaCl2) | Surface strength = 4.83 MPa | [ | |
| Loose sand | 0.5 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS (MICP) = 0.10 MPa | [ | |
| Standard sand | 0.5 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 3.29 MPa | [ | |
| Sandy soil | 3 mM urea + 2 mM CaCl2 | UCS = 0.63 MPa | [ | |
| Ottawa silica sand + PVA fiber | 0.5 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 2.20 MPa | [ | |
| Poorly graded SiO2 sand | 1.0 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 0.53 MPa | [ | |
| Poorly graded sandy silica | 1.0 M (urea + CaCl2) | UCS = 0.50 MPa | [ |
Performance of MICP by various bacteria in making concrete and mortar.
| Bacteria | Other Additives | Performance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biochar, PP fiber, SAP | Compressive strength = 53.0 MPa | [ | |
| Fly ash | Compressive strength = 32.5 MPa | [ | |
| - | Compressive strength = 46.0 MPa | [ | |
| - | Compressive strength = 54.0 MPa | [ | |
| Fly ash | Compressive strength = 33.6 MPa | [ | |
| Calcium sulpho-aluminate cement, silica fume | Compressive strength = 46.8 MPa | [ | |
| - | Compressive strength = 70.0 MPa | [ | |
| Zeolite, fiber reinforced | Compressive strength = 84.0 MPa | [ | |
| - | Compressive strength = 39.6 MPa | [ | |
| Expanded pearlite | Crack width healed = 0.8 mm | [ | |
| Fly ash | Compressive strength = 40.4 MPa | [ | |
| Metakaolin | Compressive strength = 40.2 MPa | [ | |
| Cement baghouse filter dust | Compressive strength = 36.3 MPa | [ | |
| Rice husk ash | Compressive strength = 35.0 MPa | [ | |
| Bacillus mucilaginous | Ceramsite | Crack width healed = 0.5 mm | [ |
| - | Compressive strength = 35.0 MPa | [ | |
| Granular activated carbon | Crack width healed = 0.5 mm | [ | |
| Soil bacteria | - | Compressive strength = 48.0 MPa | [ |