Title of article
Evaluation of organic substrates to enhance the sulfate-reducing activity in phosphogypsum Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Julio Castillo، نويسنده , , Rafael Pérez-L?pez، نويسنده , , Aguasanta M. Sarmiento، نويسنده , , José M. Nieto، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
8
From page
106
To page
113
Abstract
Several experiments were conducted to evaluate the activity and growth of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in a metal-rich culture medium (approx. 250 mg/L Fe, 75 mg/L Zn and Cu, 10 mg/L Cd) with phosphogypsum as bacterial inoculum. Phosphogypsum was collected from the stack covering the salt-marshes of the Tinto river (SW Spain). Three organic amendments were used as carbon sources, two low-cost wastes (horse manure and legume compost) and one sample of natural soil (vegetal cover). In the experiments, sulfate was reduced to sulfide during the growth of SRB populations, and concentrations were decreased in the solution. Metal concentrations also decreased to values below the detection limit. Metal removal took place by precipitation of newly-formed sulfides. Pyrite-S was the main sulfide component (approx. 200 μmol/g and 80% of pyritization) and occurred mainly as framboidal grains and rarely as isolated polyhedral crystals. Horse manure was the most successful organic substrate to promote SRB activity (sulfate removal of 61%), followed by vegetal cover (49%) and legume compost (31%). These findings propose the possibility of using naturally-occurring SRB in the phosphogypsum for bioremediation strategies based on natural soil covers with organic amendments.
Keywords
Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) , Phosphogypsum , Organic substrates , Sulfate reduction , Metal removal
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
988493
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