Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
580466 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2010 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Bioremediation of benzene has been carried out using cow dung microflora in a bioreactor. The bioremediation of benzene under the influence of cow dung microflora was found to be 100% and 67.5%, at initial concentrations of 100Â mg/l and 250Â mg/l within 72Â h and 168Â h respectively; where as at higher concentration (500Â mg/l), benzene was found to be inhibitory. Hence the two phase partitioning bioreactor (TPPB) has been designed and developed to carryout biodegradation at higher concentration. In TPPB 5000Â mg/l benzene was biodegraded up to 50.17% over a period of 168Â h. Further the Pseudomonas putida MHF 7109 was isolated from cow dung microflora as potential benzene degrader and its ability to degrade benzene at various concentrations was evaluated. The data indicates 100%, 81% and 65% degradation at the concentrations of 50Â mg/l, 100Â mg/l, 250Â mg/l within the time period of 24Â h, 96Â h and 168Â h respectively. The GC-MS data also shows the presence of catechol and 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, which confirms the established pathway of benzene biodegradation. The present research proves the potential of cow dung microflora as a source of biomass for benzene biodegradation in TPPB.
Keywords
Related Topics
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Chemical Engineering
Chemical Health and Safety
Authors
Dipty Singh, M.H. Fulekar,