Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
580173 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2010 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Response surface methodology (RSM) was employed to optimize nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations for removal of n-alkanes from crude oil contaminated seawater samples in batch reactors. Erlenmeyer flasks were used as bioreactors; each containing 250Â mL dispersed crude oil contaminated seawater, indigenous acclimatized microorganism and different amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus based on central composite design (CCD). Samples were extracted and analyzed according to US-EPA protocols using a gas chromatograph. During 28 days of bioremediation, a maximum of 95% total aliphatic hydrocarbons removal was observed. The obtained Model F-value of 267.73 and probability FÂ <Â 0.0001 implied the model was significant. Numerical condition optimization via a quadratic model, predicted 98% n-alkanes removal for a 20-day laboratory bioremediation trial using nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations of 13.62 and 1.39Â mg/L, respectively. In actual experiments, 95% removal was observed under these conditions.
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Authors
Mohammad Ali Zahed, Hamidi Abdul Aziz, Leila Mohajeri, Soraya Mohajeri, Shamsul Rahman Mohamed Kutty, Mohamed Hasnain Isa,