The biodegradation of organic aromatic compounds in subsurface environments is often hindered by limited dissolved oxygen. While oxygen supplementation can enhance in situ biodegradation, it poses financial and technical challenges. This study explores introducing low-oxygen concentrations in anaerobic environments for efficient contaminant removal, particularly in scenarios where coexisting pollutants are present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAromatic compounds persist as hazardous contaminants in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, needing rapid and effective remediation strategies. This study evaluated toluene and benzene biodegradation under sulfate and nitrate-reducing conditions in column experiments, utilizing aquifer sediments from a contaminated site. Over a period of 36 weeks, four glass columns were operated simultaneously in an alternating flow-batch regime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene) are common pollutants often found in former gasworks sites together with some other contaminants like indene, indane and naphthalene (Ie, Ia, N). This study aimed to evaluate the inhibitory or stimulative substrate interactions between BTEX, and Ie, Ia, N during aerobic biodegradation. For this, batch bottles, containing originally anaerobic subsurface sediments, groundwater and indigenous microorganisms from a contaminated former gasworks site, were spiked with various substrate combinations (BTEX, BTEXIe, BTEXIa, BTEXN, BTEXIeIa, BTEXIeN, BTEXIaN, BTEXIeIaN).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndustrial discharges resulting in contaminated groundwater is a global environmental problem. For such contaminated groundwater cases, bioremediation is a cost efficient and environmentally friendly approach. The determination and quantification of these pollutants has gained great importance and researchers are currently seeking to develop labor extensive, accurate and reliable methods for evaluating their biodegradation process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDNA-stable isotope probing (SIP) with C labeled phenanthrene (PHE) as substrate was used to identify specific bacterial degraders during natural attenuation (NA) and bioaugmentation (BA) in petroleum contaminated soil. BA, with the addition of a bacterial suspension mixture named GZ, played a significant role in PHE degradation with a higher PHE removal rate (∼90%) than that of NA (∼80%) during the first 3 days, and remarkably altered microbial communities. Of the five strains introduced in BA, only two genera, particularly, Ochrobactrum, Rhodococcus were extensively responsible for PHE-degradation.
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