info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Bioremediation strategies for chromium removal: Current research, scale-up approach and future perspectives
Fecha
2018-05Registro en:
Fernández, Pablo Marcelo; Viñarta, Silvana Carolina; Bernal, Anahi Romina; Castellanos, Lucia Ines; Bioremediation strategies for chromium removal: Current research, scale-up approach and future perspectives; Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd; Chemosphere; 208; 10; 5-2018; 139-148
1879-1298
0045-6535
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Fernández, Pablo Marcelo
Viñarta, Silvana Carolina
Bernal, Anahi Romina
Castellanos, Lucia Ines
Resumen
Industrial applications and commercial processes release a lot of chromium into the environment (soil, surface water or atmosphere) and resulting in serious human health diseases because of their toxicity. Biological Cr-removal offers an alternative to traditional physic-chemical methods. This is considered as a sustainable technology of lower impact on the environment. Resistant microorganisms (e.g. bacteria, fungi, and algae) have been most extensively studied from this characteristic. Microorganisms have evolved diverse mechanisms to cope with Cr toxicity. These tools include the metal uptake, which can either occur actively (bioaccumulation) or passively (biosorption), and/or the biotransformation (reduction or oxidation), are considered as an alternative to remove the heavy metal. The aim of this paper is summarizes Cr(VI)-bioremediation technologies oriented on practical applications at larger scale technologies. In the same way, a comparative study of different systems (reactors) and the most relevant results of several investigations focused on the evaluation of the process feasibility and the robustness of the pilot scale system trials in chromium-removal capacity are highlighted.