Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4427874 | Environmental Pollution | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy is used to monitor the bioavailability of a nitroxide spin probe, 4-hydroxy-Tempo or Tempol, in Ca-hectorite suspensions and pastes, to bacteria capable of degrading this probe co-metabolically. In nutrient solutions with an initial probe concentration of 1.2Â mM and in the absence of hectorite, bacteria are able to denature Tempol and eliminate its paramagnetic signal within 48Â h. In the presence of hectorite and after flocculation, the effect of bacteria is significantly delayed, but almost complete denaturation still occurs, after roughly 120Â h. When hectorite is added but the bacterial/clay suspension is not centrifuged, Tempol denaturation levels off after about 24Â h and reaches a plateau with approximately 45% of Tempol remaining. This plateau does not constitute evidence of limited bioavailability, as is widely assumed, since subsequent addition of nutrients causes the denaturation reaction to proceed to a second plateau, with merely 10% of Tempol remaining.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Environmental Science
Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Alain Dumestre, Matteo Spagnuolo, Rebecca Bladon, Jacques Berthelin, Philippe Baveye,