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Biosorption of Heavy Metals
Bohumil Volesky,Z. R. Holan +1 more
- 15 Aug 1990
4K
TL;DR: The state of the art in the field of biosorption is reviewed, with many references to recent reviews and key individual contributions, and the composition of marine algae polysaccharide structures, which seem instrumental in metal uptake and binding are discussed.
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Abstract: Only within the past decade has the potential of metal biosorption by biomass materials been well established. For economic reasons, of particular interest are abundant biomass types generated as a waste byproduct of large-scale industrial fermentations or certain metal-binding algae found in large quantities in the sea. These biomass types serve as a basis for newly developed metal biosorption processes foreseen particularly as a very competitive means for the detoxification of metal-bearing industrial effluents. The assessment of the metal-binding capacity of some new biosorbents is discussed. Lead and cadmium, for instance, have been effectively removed from very dilute solutions by the dried biomass of some ubiquitous species of brown marine algae such as Ascophyllum and Sargassum, which accumulate more than 30% of biomass dry weight in the metal. Mycelia of the industrial steroid-transforming fungi Rhizopus and Absidia are excellent biosorbents for lead, cadmium, copper, zinc, and uranium and also bind other heavy metals up to 25% of the biomass dry weight. Biosorption isotherm curves, derived from equilibrium batch sorption experiments, are used in the evaluation of metal uptake by different biosorbents. Further studies are focusing on the assessment of biosorbent performance in dynamic continuous-flow sorption systems. In the course of this work, new methodologies are being developed that are aimed at mathematical modeling of biosorption systems and their effective optimization. Elucidation of mechanisms active in metal biosorption is essential for successful exploitation of the phenomenon and for regeneration of biosorbent materials in multiple reuse cycles. The complex nature of biosorbent materials makes this task particularly challenging. Discussion focuses on the composition of marine algae polysaccharide structures, which seem instrumental in metal uptake and binding. The state of the art in the field of biosorption is reviewed in this article, with many references to recent reviews and key individual contributions.
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Citations
Biosorbents for heavy metals removal and their future
Jianlong Wang,Can Chen +1 more
TL;DR: The biosorbents widely used for heavy metal removal were reviewed, mainly focusing on their cellular structure, biosorption performance, their pretreatment, modification, regeneration/reuse, modeling of biosor adaptation (isotherm and kinetic models), the development of novel biosorbent, their evaluation, potential application and future.
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A review of the biochemistry of heavy metal biosorption by brown algae
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Activated carbons and low cost adsorbents for remediation of tri- and hexavalent chromium from water.
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TL;DR: The sorption capacities of commercial developed carbons and other low cost sorbents for chromium remediation are provided, and particular attention is paid to comparing the sorption efficiency and capacities of commercially available activated carbons to otherLow cost alternatives.
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References
Uptake of Metal Ions by Rhizopus arrhizus Biomass
TL;DR: Rhizopus arrhizus biomass was found to absorb a variety of different metal cations and anions but did not absorb alkali metal ions, and it is proposed that the uptake mechanism involves electrostatic attraction to positively charged functional groups.
Heavy metal biosorption by fungal mycelial by-products: mechanisms and influence of pH
Eric Fourest,Jean-Claude Roux +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, mycelial wastes of Rhizopus arrhizus, used in fermentation industries to produce lipases, were studied for their ability to absorb various heavy metal ions (Ni, Zn, Cd and Pb).
Cadmium removal in a biosorption column
Bohumil Volesky,Imam Prasetyo +1 more
TL;DR: New biosorbent material derived from a ubiquitous brown marine alga Ascophyllum nodosum has been examined in packed‐bed flow‐through sorption columns, resulting in quantitative determination of the characteristic process parameters which can be used for performance comparison and process design.
The mechanism of thorium biosorption by Rhizopus arrhizus.
Marios Tsezos,Bohumil Volesky +1 more
TL;DR: Experimental evidence is presented which indicates that, at optimum biosorption pH (4), thorium coordinates with the nitrogen of the chitin cell wall network and, in addition, more thorium is absorbed by the external section of the fungal cell wall.