Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
579313 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A batch upflow fixed-bed sulphate-reducing bioreactor has been set up and monitored for the treatment of synthetic solutions containing divalent iron (100Â mg/L and 200Â mg/L), zinc (100Â mg/L and 200Â mg/L), copper (100Â mg/L and 200Â mg/L), nickel (100Â mg/L and 200Â mg/L) and sulphate (1700Â mg/L and 2130Â mg/L) at initial pH 3-3.5, using ethanol as the sole electron donor. The reactor has been operated at the theoretical stoichiometric ethanol/sulphate ratio. Complete oxidation of ethanol has been achieved through complete oxidation of the intermediately, microbially produced acetate. This is mainly attributed to the presence of Desulfobacter postgatei species which dominated the sulphate-reducing community in the reactor. The reduction of sulphate was limited to about 85%. Quantitative precipitation of the soluble metal ions has been achieved. XRD and SEM-EDS analyses performed on samples of the produced sludge showed poorly crystalline phases of marcasite, covellite and wurtzite as well as several mixed metal sulphides.
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Authors
Pavlina Kousi, Emmanouela Remoundaki, Artin Hatzikioseyian, Fabienne Battaglia-Brunet, Catherine Joulian, Vassiliki Kousteni, Marios Tsezos,