The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation
abstract: Uranium (U) contamination has been attracting public concern, and many researchers are investigating principles and applications of U remediation. The overall goal of my research is to understand the versatile roles of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in uranium bioremediation, including di...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-249282018-06-22T03:04:56Z The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation abstract: Uranium (U) contamination has been attracting public concern, and many researchers are investigating principles and applications of U remediation. The overall goal of my research is to understand the versatile roles of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in uranium bioremediation, including direct involvement (reducing U) and indirect involvement (protecting U reoxidation). I pursue this goal by studying Desulfovibro vuglaris, a representative SRB. For direct involvement, I performed experiments on uranium bioreduction and uraninite (UO2) production in batch tests and in a H2-based membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR) inoculated with D. vuglaris. In summary, D. vuglaris was able to immobilize soluble U(VI) by enzymatically reducing it to insoluble U(IV), and the nanocrystallinte UO2 was associated with the biomass. In the MBfR system, although D. vuglaris failed to form a biofilm, other microbial groups capable of U(VI) reduction formed a biofilm, and up to 95% U removal was achieved during a long-term operation. For the indirect involvement, I studied the production and characterization of and biogenic iron sulfide (FeS) in batch tests. In summary, D. vuglaris produced nanocrystalline FeS, a potential redox buffer to protect UO2 from remobilization by O2. My results demonstrate that a variety of controllable environmental parameters, including pH, free sulfide, and types of Fe sources and electron donors, significantly determined the characteristics of both biogenic solids, and those characteristics should affect U-sequestrating performance by SRB. Overall, my results provide a baseline for exploiting effective and sustainable approaches to U bioremediation, including the application of the novel MBfR technology to U sequestration from groundwater and biogenic FeS for protecting remobilization of sequestrated U, as well as the microbe-relevant tools to optimize U sequestration applicable in reality. Dissertation/Thesis Zhou, Chen (Author) Rittmann, Bruce E (Advisor) Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Committee member) Torres, César I (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Environmental engineering eng 160 pages Ph.D. Civil and Environmental Engineering 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.24928 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014 |
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English |
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Doctoral Thesis |
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Environmental engineering |
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Environmental engineering The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation |
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abstract: Uranium (U) contamination has been attracting public concern, and many researchers are investigating principles and applications of U remediation. The overall goal of my research is to understand the versatile roles of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in uranium bioremediation, including direct involvement (reducing U) and indirect involvement (protecting U reoxidation). I pursue this goal by studying Desulfovibro vuglaris, a representative SRB. For direct involvement, I performed experiments on uranium bioreduction and uraninite (UO2) production in batch tests and in a H2-based membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR) inoculated with D. vuglaris. In summary, D. vuglaris was able to immobilize soluble U(VI) by enzymatically reducing it to insoluble U(IV), and the nanocrystallinte UO2 was associated with the biomass. In the MBfR system, although D. vuglaris failed to form a biofilm, other microbial groups capable of U(VI) reduction formed a biofilm, and up to 95% U removal was achieved during a long-term operation. For the indirect involvement, I studied the production and characterization of and biogenic iron sulfide (FeS) in batch tests. In summary, D. vuglaris produced nanocrystalline FeS, a potential redox buffer to protect UO2 from remobilization by O2. My results demonstrate that a variety of controllable environmental parameters, including pH, free sulfide, and types of Fe sources and electron donors, significantly determined the characteristics of both biogenic solids, and those characteristics should affect U-sequestrating performance by SRB. Overall, my results provide a baseline for exploiting effective and sustainable approaches to U bioremediation, including the application of the novel MBfR technology to U sequestration from groundwater and biogenic FeS for protecting remobilization of sequestrated U, as well as the microbe-relevant tools to optimize U sequestration applicable in reality. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Civil and Environmental Engineering 2014 |
author2 |
Zhou, Chen (Author) |
author_facet |
Zhou, Chen (Author) |
title |
The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation |
title_short |
The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation |
title_full |
The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation |
title_fullStr |
The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Versatile Roles of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria for Uranium Bioremediation |
title_sort |
versatile roles of sulfate-reducing bacteria for uranium bioremediation |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.24928 |
_version_ |
1718700374736502784 |