| Literature DB >> 35041898 |
Tianxiao Li1, Hongxia Xu2, Yuxuan Zhang1, Hanshuo Zhang1, Xin Hu3, Yuanyuan Sun4, Xueyuan Gu1, Jun Luo1, Dongmei Zhou1, Bin Gao5.
Abstract
Selenium is an indispensable trace element for humans and other organisms; however, excessive selenium in water can jeopardize the aquatic environment. Investigations on the biogeochemical cycle of selenium have shown that anthropogenic activities such as mining, refinery, and coal combustion mainly contribute to aquatic selenium pollution, imposing tremendous risks on ecosystems and human beings. Various technologies thus have been developed recently to treat selenium contaminated water to reduce its environmental impacts. This work provides a critical review on the applications, characteristics, and latest developments of current treatment technologies for selenium polluted water. It first outlines the present status of the characteristics, sources, and toxicity of selenium in water. Selenium treatment technologies are then classified into three categories: 1) physicochemical separation including membrane filtration, adsorption, coagulation/precipitation, 2) redox decontamination including chemical reduction and catalysis, and 3) biological transformation including microbial treatment and constructed wetland. Details of these methods including their overall efficiencies, applicability, advantages and drawbacks, and latest developments are systematically analyzed and compared. Although all these methods are promising in treating selenium in water, further studies are still needed to develop sustainable strategies based on existing and new technologies. Perspectives on future research directions are laid out at the end.Entities:
Keywords: Biological transformation; Bioremediation; Physicochemical separation; Redox decontamination; Selenium contamination; Water treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35041898 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.118858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071