| Literature DB >> 35610343 |
Junzhen Di1, Yiming Ma2, Mingjia Wang2, Zhenyu Gao3, Xiaotain Xu4, Yanrong Dong2, Saiou Fu2, Hanzhe Li2.
Abstract
Aiming at the problem that the treatment of acid mine drainage (AMD) by sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) biological method is susceptible to pH, metal ions, sulfate and carbon source. Lignite immobilized SRB particles (SRB-LP) and Rhodopseudomonas spheroides (R. spheroides) activated lignite immobilized SRB particles (R-SRB-LP) were prepared using microbial immobilization technology with SRB, R. spheroides and lignite as the main substrates. The dynamic experimental columns 1# and 2# were constructed with SRB-LP and R-SRB-LP as fillers, respectively, to investigate the dynamic repair effect of SRB-LP and R-SRB-LP on AMD. The mechanism of AMD treated with R-L-SRB particles was analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer and low-temperature nitrogen adsorption. The result showed that the combination of R. spheroides and lignite could continuously provide carbon source for SRB, so that the highest removal rates of SO42-, Cu2+ and Zn2+ in AMD by R-SRB-LP were 93.97%, 98.52% and 94.42%, respectively, and the highest pH value was 7.60. The dynamic repair effect of R-SRB-LP on AMD was significantly better than that of SRB-LP. The characterization results indicated that after R-SRB-LP reaction, the functional groups of -OH and large benzene ring structure in lignite were broken, the lignite structure was destroyed, and the specific surface area was 1.58 times larger than before reaction. It illustrated that R. spheroides provided carbon source for SRB by degrading lignite. The strong SRB activity in R-SRB-LP, SRB can co-treat AMD with lignite, so that the dynamic treatment effect of R-SRB-LP on AMD is significantly better than that of SRB-LP.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35610343 PMCID: PMC9130216 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-12897-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Experimental device.
Figure 2Changes of ORP values in dynamic columns 1# and 2#.
Figure 3COD release in dynamic columns 1# and 2#.
Figure 4pH enhancement effect in dynamic columns 1# and 2#.
Figure 5Removal rate of SO42- in dynamic columns 1# and 2#.
Figure 6Cu2+ and Zn2+ removal effects in dynamic columns 1# and 2#.
Figure 7Kinetic fitting. (a) Zero-order kinetics of reduction of SO42−. (b) First-order kinetics of SO42−. (c) Pseudo-first-order kinetics of Zn2+. (d) Pseudo-second-order kinetics of Zn2+.
SO42− Zero-order kinetics, first-order kinetics parameters and Zn2+ pseudo-first-order kinetics, pseudo-second-order kinetics parameters.
| Object | Zero-order | First-order | Object | Pseudo-first-order | Pseudo-second-order | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reduction kinetics of SO42- | k0 (mg L−1 h−1) | R2 | k1 (h−1) | R2 | Adsorption kinetics of Zn2+ | k2 | R2 | k3 | R2 |
| 6.359 | 0.941 | 0.0198 | 0.991 | 0.0042 | 0.797 | 0.268 | 0.999 | ||
Figure 8SEM images of SRB-LP and R-SRB-LP. (a) SEM image of SRB-LP before AMD treatment. (b) SEM image of SRB-LP after AMD treatment. (c) SEM image of R-SRB-LP particles before AMD treatment. (d) SEM image of R-SRB-LP after AMD treatment.
Figure 9FTIR plots of SRB-LP and R-SRB-LP before and after AMD treatment. (a) FTIR of SRB-LP before and after reaction. (b) FTIR of SRB-LP before and after reaction.
Specific surface area analysis.
| BET specific surface area (m2/g) | BET correlation coefficient | Langmuir specific surface area (m2/g) | Langmuir correlation coefficient | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRB-LP before the reaction | 6.8992 | 0.9990 | 15.392 | 0.9860 |
| SRB-LP after the reaction | 6.9012 | 0.9990 | 15.426 | 0.9860 |
| R-SRB-LP before the reaction | 7.4621 | 0.9990 | 16.6545 | 0.9860 |
| R-SRB-LP after the reaction | 11.8146 | 0.9990 | 25.5604 | 0.9860 |
Figure 10R-SRB-LP adsorption equilibrium isotherm conclusion.