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Biomineralization of calcium carbonate by marine bacterial strains isolated from calcareous deposits
Author(s) -
Julia Vincent,
R. Sabot,
Isabelle Lanneluc,
Philippe Refait,
Philippe Turcry,
Pierre-Yves Mahieux,
Marc Jeannin,
Sophie Sablé
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
matériaux and techniques
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.175
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 1778-3771
pISSN - 0032-6895
DOI - 10.1051/mattech/2020027
Subject(s) - biomineralization , calcium carbonate , calcareous , calcite , carbonate , chemistry , seawater , vaterite , agglomerate , chemical engineering , urease , calcium , environmental chemistry , mineralogy , materials science , geology , aragonite , urea , biochemistry , organic chemistry , paleontology , oceanography , engineering
Biomineralization induced by microbial enzymes, which catalyse CaCO 3 precipitation, is a promising field of research for various applications in building eco-materials. Especially, this could provide an eco-friendly process for protection of coastal areas against erosion. In the present investigation, fourteen bacterial strains were isolated and characterized from both natural seawater and calcareous deposits formed on a cathodically protected steel mesh in marine environment. All of them induced calcium carbonate precipitation in various media by producing urease and/or carbonic anhydrase enzymes. The calcium carbonate minerals produced by bacteria were identified by microscopy and µ-Raman spectroscopy. In parallel, an experimental set-up, based on a column reactor, was developed to study biomineralization and microbial capacity of Sporosarcina pasteurii to form sandy agglomerate. These well-known calcifying bacteria degraded the urea present in liquid medium circulating through the column to produce calcium carbonate, which acted as cement between sand particles. The bio-bricks obtained after 3 weeks had a compressive strength of 4.2 MPa. 20% of the inter-granular voids were filled by calcite and corresponded to 13% of the total mass. We successfully showed that bio-column system can be used to evaluate the bacterial ability to agglomerate a sandy matrix with CaCO 3 .

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