z-logo
Premium
Biological treatment of groundwater with a high hexavalent chromium content under anaerobic and anoxic conditions
Author(s) -
Panousi Eleni,
Mamais Daniel,
Noutsopoulos Constantinos,
Antoniou Korina,
Koutoula Kiriaki,
Mastrantoni Sevasti,
Koutsogiannis Constantinos,
Gkioni Alexandra
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of chemical technology and biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.64
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1097-4660
pISSN - 0268-2575
DOI - 10.1002/jctb.4973
Subject(s) - anoxic waters , hexavalent chromium , anaerobic exercise , chemistry , chromium , environmental chemistry , biology , organic chemistry , physiology
BACKGROUND Microbial reduction of Cr( VI ) to the much less toxic Cr( III ), although practiced for the treatment of liquid wastes has not been implemented for the treatment of groundwater due to the absence of electron donors (organic substrates) and the lack of data on inhibition of biological Cr( VI ) removal. The objective of this work is to evaluate biological groundwater treatment systems that will achieve high Cr( VI ) removal with addition of a low dose of organic substrate and to estimate inhibition of microbial Cr( VI ) reduction under anaerobic and anoxic conditions. RESULTS Biomass acclimatized to Cr( VI ) under anaerobic conditions exhibited a higher sensitivity to Cr( VI ) compared with biomass acclimatized to Cr( VI ) under anoxic conditions. No significant inhibition of microbial growth was observed under anaerobic conditions for initial groundwater Cr( VI ) concentrations up to 2000 µg L −1 , whereas no significant inhibition was obtained under anoxic conditions at Cr( VI ) concentrations as high as 10 000 µg L −1 . CONCLUSION This study demonstrates that anoxic biological systems treating groundwater can provide complete hexavalent chromium removal at initial hexavalent chromium concentrations as high as 10 000 µg L −1 . In addition anaerobic conditions can support complete hexavalent chromium removal at initial hexavalent chromium concentrations as high as 2000 µg L −1 . © 2016 Society of Chemical Industry

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here