Search results for "Mediation."
showing 10 items of 761 documents
Wastewater Treatments for the Food Industry: Biological Systems
2017
This chapter provides a general overview of biological wastewater remediation systems in the food industry. Water reuse systems are becoming more and more interesting and promising technologies, depending on merely quantitative estimations, physical and chemical features of pollutants and the variability of these characteristics, week after week. Different systems are available for the food industry. Several of these remediation systems may be subdivided into four categories depending on the peculiar removal operation, including biological systems. Biological techniques aim to reduce organic loads and the remaining suspended materials in wastewaters from primary processes (after a prelimina…
Semiconductor mixed oxides as innovative materials for the photocatalytic removal of organic pollutants
2020
Abstract This work aims to provide a critical survey of the extensive literature concerning the potential applications of nanostructured mixed oxides for environmental remediation. In particular, our attention was focused on the feasibility to employ these materials as photocatalysts for the elimination of toxic organic pollutants contained in water and wastewater. The advantages and perspectives of the various nanocomposites are briefly discussed.
Microbial Adaptation to Boreal Saturated Subsurface: Implications in Bioremediation of Polychlorophenols
2008
Saturated subsurface environments pose challenges to the intrinsic microbiology. Prevailing environmental conditions (temperature, pH, bioavailability of substrates and nutrients) affect microbial biodegradation activity, which is often favored by certain redox conditions. Microbial adaptation in each redox environment proceeds by selection and enrichment of indigenous bacteria, evolution of novel catabolic pathways and horizontal gene transfer (Wilson et al. 1985; van der Meer et al. 1998; Tiirola et al. 2002b). Formation of biofilms enables microbial retainment, co-operation among microorganisms and enhanced gene transfer among organisms (Singh et al. 2006). Chlorophenols are toxic and pe…
Wastewater Treatments for the Food Industry: Physical-Chemical Systems
2017
This chapter provides a general overview of physical–chemical wastewater remediation systems in the food industry. Water reuse systems are becoming more and more interesting and promising technologies, depending on merely quantitative estimations, physical and chemical features of pollutants and the variability of these characteristics, week after week. Different systems are available for the food industry, depending on the final destination or water effluents and peculiar chemical–physical and biological features of the fluids before treatment. Several of these remediation systems can be subdivided into different groups, depending on the desired amount of gross removed matters, or into fou…
Phytoremediation and Plant-Assisted Bioremediation in Soil and Treatment Wetlands: A Review
2015
Phytoremediation is a technology that is based on the combined action of plants and their associated microbial communities to degrade, remove, transform, or immobilize toxic compounds located in soils, sediments, and more recently in polluted ground water and wastewater in treatment wetlands. Phytoremediation could be used to treat different types of contaminants including petroleum hydrocarbons, chlorinated solvents, pesticides, explosives, heavy metals and radionuclides in soil and water. The advantages of phytoremediation compared to conventional techniques are lower cost, low disruptiveness to the environment, public acceptance, and potentiality to remediate various pollutants. The use …
A new opportunity in bioremediation of copper polluted soils.
2016
On the Reduction of Power Consumption in Vortexing Unbaffled Bioslurry Reactors
2020
Bioremediation of polluted soils via bioslurry reactors is an interesting option among those available nowadays, especially when recalcitrant pollutants are present. Vortexing unbaffled stirred tanks may be a valuable choice to this purpose as they were recently found to be more efficient than baffled vessels for solid suspension processes where mixing time is not a controlling factor. When operated at sufficiently high agitation speeds, the central vortex bottom reaches the impeller and air bubbles start to be distributed throughout the system, thus avoiding any sparger and related clogging issues. In the present work, a vortexing unbaffled stirred tank with solid loadings ranging from 2.5…
Contaminant Mobilization from Polluted Soils: Behavior and Reuse of Leaching Solutions
2020
Soil and water contamination by toxic elements or molecules cause risks of chemical pollutions. These pollutions can heavily affect resources and activities of humans and ecosystems. By nature, the remediation of environmental pollutions is a constraint, because its application is hampered by high costs. Soil and groundwater remediation implements a variety of strategies, technologies, and practices to face the diversity and the complexity of every cases. Contaminant recovery is among the three main strategies implemented for the remediation of contaminated soils, and contaminant separation or mobilization by water is widely used for this purpose. As water solubility is the driving force of…
Handbook of Metal-Microbe Interactions and Bioremediation
2017
Around the World, metal pollution is a major problem. Conventional practices of toxic metal removal can be ineffective and/or expensive, delaying and exacerbating the crisis. Those communities dealing with contamination must be aware of the fundamentals advances of microbe-mediated metal removal practices because these methods can be easily used and require less remedial intervention. This book describes innovations and efficient applications for metal bioremediation for environments polluted by metal contaminates.
Assessment of toxicity hazards of dredged lake sediment contaminated by creosote.
2000
In order to predict the potential toxicity hazards of sediment remediation by dredging, an experimental laboratory simulation was made by investigating seven ratios of creosote-contaminated sediment (Lake Jamsanvesi, central Finland) and artificial lake water mixtures. Sediment was suspended in water at the ratios of 1:1, 1:2, 1:4, 1:8, 1:16, 1:32, 1:64, 1:128 v/v. The elutriates were analysed for the acute toxicity by photoluminescence bacterial and waterflea (Daphnia magna Straus) tests. The concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are determined by gas chromatography (GC/FID). The elutriate of ratio 1:2 was most toxic to bacteria (EC50 = 4.5%), whereas the ratio 1:4 was …