The present work deals with bioaugmentation strategies with acidophilic chemoautotrophic Fe/S-oxidisingbacteria for the mobilization of metals from different solid wastes: end of life industrial catalysts, sedimentscontaminated with heavy metals, fluorescent powders coming from a cathode ray tube glass recycling process.The performed experiments were aimed at assessing the performance of bacteria for such different solidmatrices, also focusing on the effect of solid concentration and of different substrata. The achieved results haveevidenced that metal solubilisation results to be strongly influenced by the metal speciation and partitioning inthe solid matrix. No biological effect was observed in Ni, Zn, As, Cr mobilisation from marine sediments (34%,44%, 15%, 10% yields, respectively). On the other hand, for spent refinery catalysts (Ni, V, Mo extractions of83, 90 and 40%, respectively) and fluorescent powders (Zn and Y extraction of 55% and 70%, respectively), theimprovement in metal extraction observed in the presence of a microbial activity confirms the key role of Fe/Soxidizing bacteria and ferrous iron. A negative effect of solid concentration was in general observed onbioleaching performances, due to the toxicity of dissolved metals and/or to the solid organic component.

Acidophilic strains for the valorization of metal bearing wastes

Ubaldini S;
2011

Abstract

The present work deals with bioaugmentation strategies with acidophilic chemoautotrophic Fe/S-oxidisingbacteria for the mobilization of metals from different solid wastes: end of life industrial catalysts, sedimentscontaminated with heavy metals, fluorescent powders coming from a cathode ray tube glass recycling process.The performed experiments were aimed at assessing the performance of bacteria for such different solidmatrices, also focusing on the effect of solid concentration and of different substrata. The achieved results haveevidenced that metal solubilisation results to be strongly influenced by the metal speciation and partitioning inthe solid matrix. No biological effect was observed in Ni, Zn, As, Cr mobilisation from marine sediments (34%,44%, 15%, 10% yields, respectively). On the other hand, for spent refinery catalysts (Ni, V, Mo extractions of83, 90 and 40%, respectively) and fluorescent powders (Zn and Y extraction of 55% and 70%, respectively), theimprovement in metal extraction observed in the presence of a microbial activity confirms the key role of Fe/Soxidizing bacteria and ferrous iron. A negative effect of solid concentration was in general observed onbioleaching performances, due to the toxicity of dissolved metals and/or to the solid organic component.
2011
Istituto di Geologia Ambientale e Geoingegneria - IGAG
Inglese
Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference Biotechnologies and Metals
2nd International Conference Biotechnologies and Metals
1
4
4
978-80-553-0723-7
Esperti anonimi
September 22th-23th, 2011
Kosice, Slovak Republic
bioaugmentation
metal
sediment
spent catalyst
fluorescent powders
6
restricted
Beolchini, F; Fonti, V; Dell'Anno, A; Rocchetti, L; Ubaldini, S; Vegliò, F
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
   Innovative Hydrometallurgical Processes to recover Metals from WEEE including lamps and batteries
   HYDROWEEE
   FP7
   231962

   Innovative Hydrometallurgical Processes to recover Metals from WEEE including lamps and batteries - Demonstration
   HYDROWEEE DEMO
   FP7
   308549
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/57457
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