The combination of lactic acid production wastewater and oil-producing microalgal culture could not only achieve harmless treatment of wastewater but also provided nutrients and significant amounts of water for microalgal culture. Thus the effects of different nutrients on the biomass yield, lipid yield of Scenedesmus dimorphus with lactic acid wastewater were investigated. Although lactic acid wastewater was very suitable for the cultivation of oil-producing microalgae, some nutrients were still needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste biomass from γ-polyglutamic acid production was used as an adsorbent to remove Cr(VI) from wastewater. Waste biomass was entrapped in sodium alginate to enhance performance. Orthogonal array design was used to optimize biosorption of Cr(VI) by immobilized waste biomass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrain P17 was a bacterial strain identified as Bacillus megaterium isolated from ground accumulating phosphate rock powder. The fermentation broth of strain P17 and the yellow-brown soil from Nanjing Agricultural University garden were collected to conduct this study. The simulation of fixed insoluble phosphorous forms after applying calcium superphosphate into yellow-brown soil was performed in pots, while available P and total P of soil were extremely positive correlative with those of groundwater.
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