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Elsevier, Journal of Hazardous Materials, 1-3(178), p. 706-712

DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2010.01.145

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Experimental investigation of bio-removal of toxic organic pollutants from highly saline solutions in a triphasic system

Journal article published in 2010 by Ruey-Shin Juang ORCID, Kuo-Jui Tseng
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A combined solvent extraction and biphasic biodegradation process was proposed to remove organic pollutants from highly saline solutions, where the organic solvent is biocompatible and the organic-aqueous interface remains quasi-quiescent during the process. Phenol and Pseudomonas putida BCRC 14365 were selected as the model organic compound and biomass, respectively. The effects of added NaCl concentration (50-200 g/L) and pH (1.0-9.0) in synthetic solutions on phenol removal and cell growth were studied at 30 degrees C. The initial cell concentration was fixed at 0.025 g/L. Within the examined range, the adjustment of solution pH to 3.0 resulted in the best removal performance of 1100 mg/L phenol from such saline solutions (an apparent removal rate of about 20 mg/(Lh)) when using kerosene as the organic solvent. The overall process appeared to be favored when the salt concentration in saline solution was in the range of 100-150 g/L. The application potentials of such a triphasic process for the removal of toxic organics (phenol) from highly saline and acidic wastewaters were finally demonstrated in fed-batch mode.