A single-stage sol-gel route was set to entrap yeast cells of Lipomyces starkeyi inazirconia (ZrO2) matrix,andthe remediation ability of the resulting catalyst toward a phenoxy acid herbicide, 4-chloro-2-methylphenoxyacetic acid (MCPA), was studied. It was found that the experimental procedure allowed a high dispersion of the microorganisms into the zirconia gel matrix; the ZrO2 matrix exhibited a significant sorption capacity of the herbicide, and the entrapped cells showed a degradative activity toward MCPA. The combination of these effects leads to a nearly total removal efficiency (>97%) of the herbicide at 30 °C within 1 h incubation time from a solution containing a very high concentration of MCPA (200 mg L-1). On the basis of the experimental evidence, a removal mechanism was proposed involving in the first step the sorption of the herbicide molecules on the ZrO2 matrix, followed by the microbial degradation operated by the entrapped yeasts, the metabolic activity of which appear enhanced under the microenvironmental conditions established within the zirconia matrix. Repeated batch tests of sorption/degradation of entrapped Lipomyces showed that the removal efficiency retained almost the same value of 97.3% after 3 batch tests, with only a subsequent slight decrease, probably due to the progressive saturation of the zirconia matrix.
Remediation of Waters Contaminated with MCPA by the Yeasts Lipomyces starkeyi Entrapped in a Sol-Gel Zirconia Matrix / Sannino, Filomena; Pirozzi, Domenico; Aronne, Antonio; Fanelli, Esther; Spaccini, Riccardo; A., Yousuf; Pernice, Pasquale. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0013-936X. - ELETTRONICO. - 44:24(2010), pp. 9476-9481.
Remediation of Waters Contaminated with MCPA by the Yeasts Lipomyces starkeyi Entrapped in a Sol-Gel Zirconia Matrix.
SANNINO, FILOMENA;PIROZZI, DOMENICO;ARONNE, ANTONIO;FANELLI, Esther;SPACCINI, RICCARDO;PERNICE, PASQUALE
2010
Abstract
A single-stage sol-gel route was set to entrap yeast cells of Lipomyces starkeyi inazirconia (ZrO2) matrix,andthe remediation ability of the resulting catalyst toward a phenoxy acid herbicide, 4-chloro-2-methylphenoxyacetic acid (MCPA), was studied. It was found that the experimental procedure allowed a high dispersion of the microorganisms into the zirconia gel matrix; the ZrO2 matrix exhibited a significant sorption capacity of the herbicide, and the entrapped cells showed a degradative activity toward MCPA. The combination of these effects leads to a nearly total removal efficiency (>97%) of the herbicide at 30 °C within 1 h incubation time from a solution containing a very high concentration of MCPA (200 mg L-1). On the basis of the experimental evidence, a removal mechanism was proposed involving in the first step the sorption of the herbicide molecules on the ZrO2 matrix, followed by the microbial degradation operated by the entrapped yeasts, the metabolic activity of which appear enhanced under the microenvironmental conditions established within the zirconia matrix. Repeated batch tests of sorption/degradation of entrapped Lipomyces showed that the removal efficiency retained almost the same value of 97.3% after 3 batch tests, with only a subsequent slight decrease, probably due to the progressive saturation of the zirconia matrix.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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