Bioremediation can be defined as any process that uses microorganisms, fungi, green plants or their enzymes to return the environment altered by contaminants to its original condition. Bioremediation may be employed to attack specific soil contaminants, such as chlorinated hydrocarbons that are degraded by bacteria, or a more general approach may be taken, such as oil spills that are broken down by multiple techniques including the addition of nitrate and/or sulfate fertilizers to facilitate the decomposition of crude oil by indigenous or exogenous bacteria.
Not all contaminants are easily treated through the use of bioremediation with microorganisms; for example, heavy metals such as cadmium and lead are not readily absorbed or captured by organisms. The integration of metals such as mercury into the food chain may worsen matters. Phytoremediation is useful in these circumstances, as many plants can bioaccumulate these toxins in their above-ground parts, which are then harvested for removal. The heavy metals in the harvested biomass can be further concentrated by incineration.
Using genetic engineering to create organisms specifically designed for bioremediation has great potential. The bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans (the most radioresistant organism known) has been modified to consume and digest toluene and ionic mercury from highly radioactive nuclear waste.
There are a number of cost/efficiency advantages to bioremediation, which can be employed in areas that inaccessible without excavation. For example, hydrocarbon spills (specifically, petrol spills) or certain chlorinated solvents may contaminate groundwater and introducing the appropriate electron acceptor or electron donor amendment, as appropriate, may significantly reduce contaminant concentrations after a lag time allowing for acclimation. This is typically much less expensive than excavation followed by disposal elsewhere, incineration or other ex situ treatment strategies, and reduces or eliminates the need for "pump and treat", a common practice at sites where hydrocarbons have contaminated groundwater.
Generally, bioremediation technologies can be classified as in situ or ex situ. In situ bioremediation involves treating the contaminated material at the site while ex situ involves the removal of the contaminated material to be treated elsewhere. Some examples of bioremediation technologies are bioventing, landfarming, bioreactor, composting, bioaugmentation, rhizofiltration, and biostimulation.
| Process | Reaction | Redox potential (Eh in mV) |
|---|---|---|
| aerobic: | O2 + 4e- + 4H+ → 2H2O | 600 — 400 |
| anaerobic: | ||
| denitrification | 2NO3- + 10e- + 12H+ → N2 + 6H2O | 500 — 200 |
| manganese IV reduction | MnO2 + 2e- + 4H+ → Mn2+ + 2H2O | 400 — 200 |
| iron III reduction | Fe(OH)3 + e- + 3H+ → Fe2+ + 3H2O | 300 — 100 |
| sulfate reduction | SO42- +8e- +10H+ → H2S + 4H2O | 0 — -150 |
| fermentation | 2CH2O → CO2 + CH4 | -150 — -220 |
This, by itself and at a single site, gives little information about the process of remediation.
Biotechnology | Microbiology | Environmentalism | Environmental soil science | Soil contamination
Bioremediace | Bioremediation | Biorremediación | Bioremédiation | Bioremediacja | Biorremediação
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