Bioremediation of Wastewater Using Yeast Strains: An Assessment of Contaminant Removal Efficiency.
Nicoleta-Oana NiculaEduard-Marius LungulescuGimi A RîmbuVirgil MarinescuViorica Maria CorbuOrtansa CsutakPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2023)
The main goal of wastewater treatment is to significantly reduce organic compounds, micronutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) and heavy metals and other contaminants (pathogens, pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals). In this work, the efficiency of removing different contaminants (COD, NO 3 - , NO 2 - , NH 4 + , PO 4 3- , SO 4 2- , Pb 2+ , Cd 2+ ) from synthetic wastewater was tested using five different yeast strains: Kluyveromyces marxianus CMGBP16 (P1), Saccharomyces cerevisiae S228C (P2), Saccharomyces cerevisiae CM6B70 (P3), Saccharomyces cerevisiae CMGB234 (P4) and Pichia anomala CMGB88 (P5). The results showed a removal efficiency of up to 70% of COD, 97% of nitrate, 80% of nitrite, 93% of phosphate and 70% of sulfate ions for synthetic wastewater contaminated with Pb 2+ (43 mg/L) and Cd 2+ ions (39 mg/L). In contrast, the results showed an increase in ammonium ions, especially in the presence of Pb 2+ ions. The yeast strains showed a high capacity to reduce Pb 2+ (up to 96%) and Cd 2+ (up to 40%) ions compared to the initial concentrations. In presence of a crude biosurfactant, the removal efficiency increased up to 99% for Pb 2+ and 56% for Cd 2+ simultaneously with an increase in yeast biomass of up to 11 times. The results, which were obtained in the absence of aeration and in neutral pH conditions, proved a high potential for practical applications in the biotreatment of the wastewater and the recovery of Pb and Cd ions, with a high benefit-cost ratio.
Keyphrases
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- heavy metals
- wastewater treatment
- aqueous solution
- quantum dots
- risk assessment
- health risk assessment
- antibiotic resistance genes
- sewage sludge
- health risk
- drinking water
- escherichia coli
- nk cells
- water soluble
- nitric oxide
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- microbial community
- antimicrobial resistance
- climate change
- ionic liquid
- amino acid
- bacillus subtilis