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Biological treatment processes for saline organic wastewater and related inhibition mechanisms and facilitation techniques: A comprehensive review. | LitMetric

Biological treatment processes for saline organic wastewater and related inhibition mechanisms and facilitation techniques: A comprehensive review.

Environ Res

National Engineering Research Center for Urban Pollution Control and State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resources Reuse, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 200092, China. Electronic address:

Published: December 2023

Owing to its profound pollution-inducing properties and resistance to biodegradation, saline organic wastewater (SOW) has unavoidably emerged as a predominant focal point within the wastewater treatment domain. Substantial quantities of SOW are discharged by diverse industries encompassing food processing, pharmaceuticals, leather manufacturing, petrochemicals, and textiles. Within this review, the inhibitory repercussions of elevated salinity upon biological water treatment systems are subject to methodical scrutiny spanning from sludge characteristics, microbial consortia to the physiological functionality of microorganisms have been investigated. This exposition elucidates the application of both anaerobic and aerobic biological technologies for SOW treatment, which noting that conventional bioreactors can effectually treat SOW through microbial adaptation, and elaborating that cultivation of salt-tolerant bacteria and the design of advanced bioreactors represents a promising avenue for SOW treatment. Furthermore, the mechanisms underpinning microbial acclimatization to hypersaline milieus and the methodologies aimed at amplifying the efficacy of biological SOW treatment are delved into, which point out that microorganism exhibit salt tolerance via extracellular polymeric substance accumulation or by facilitating the influx of osmolarity-regulating agents into the bacterial matrix. Finally, the projections for future inquiry are proffered, encompassing the proliferation and deployment of high salt-tolerant strains, as well as the development of techniques enhancing the salt tolerance of microflora engaged in wastewater treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2023.117404DOI Listing

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