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Biosorption: critical review of scientific rationale, environmental importance and significance for pollution treatment

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TLDR
Biosorption is a physico-chemical process and includes such mechanisms as absorption, adsorption, ion exchange, surface complexation and precipitation as discussed by the authors, which has been heralded as a promising biotechnology for pollutant removal from solution, and/or pollutant recovery.
Abstract
Biosorption may be simply defined as the removal of substances from solution by biological material. Such substances can be organic and inorganic, and in gaseous, soluble or insoluble forms. Biosorption is a physico-chemical process and includes such mechanisms as absorption, adsorption, ion exchange, surface complexation and precipitation. Biosorption is a property of both living and dead organisms (and their components) and has been heralded as a promising biotechnology for pollutant removal from solution, and/or pollutant recovery, for a number of years, because of its efficiency, simplicity, analogous operation to conventional ion exchange technology, and availability of biomass. Most biosorption studies have carried out on microbial systems, chiefly bacteria, microalgae and fungi, and with toxic metals and radionuclides, including actinides like uranium and thorium. However, practically all biological material has an affinity for metal species and a considerable amount of other research exists with macroalgae (seaweeds) as well as plant and animal biomass, waste organic sludges, and many other wastes or derived bio-products. While most biosorption research concerns metals and related substances, including radionuclides, the term is now applied to particulates and all manner of organic substances as well. However, despite continuing dramatic increases in published research on biosorption, there has been little or no exploitation in an industrial context. This article critically reviews aspects of biosorption research regarding the benefits, disadvantages, and future potential of biosorption as an industrial process, the rationale, scope and scientific value of biosorption research, and the significance of biosorption in other waste treatment processes and in the environment. Copyright © 2008 Society of Chemical Industry

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biosorption and biotransformation of chromium by Serratia sp. isolated from tannery effluent

TL;DR: The results of the study indicated that a combined mechanism of ion-exchange, complexation, croprecipitation and immobilization was involved in the biosorption of chromium by bacterial cells in contaminated environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adsorption Properties toward Trivalent Rare Earths by Alginate Beads Doping with Silica

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of the pH, adsorption kinetics, isotherms, and regeneration of adsorbents had been studied systematically, and it can be concluded that ALG/SiO2 is superior to the other hybrid alginate adsorbent for the adorption of rare earths.
Journal ArticleDOI

Roles of saprotrophic fungi in biodegradation or transformation of organic and inorganic pollutants in co-contaminated sites.

TL;DR: Different ecological, metabolic, and physiological aspects involved in fungal bioremediation of co-contaminated soils and water systems are reviewed, not only addressing best methods and approaches to assess the simultaneous presence of metals and organic toxic compounds and their consequences on provided ecosystem services but also the interactions between fungi and bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biotechnological remedies for the estuarine environment polluted with heavy metals and persistent organic pollutants

TL;DR: The concept of bioremediation involves the use of competent biological elements such as microorganisms and plants, along with or without the biomolecules they produced, to ameliorate pollution as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphatase-mediated bioprecipitation of lead by soil fungi.

TL;DR: These findings provide further understanding of lead geomycology and organic phosphates as a biomineralization substrate, and are also relevant to metal immobilization biotechnologies for bioremediation, metal and P biorecovery, and utilization of waste organic phosphate substrates.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Review of second-order models for adsorption systems.

TL;DR: An overview of second-order kinetic expressions is described in this paper based on the solid adsorption capacity, which shows that a pseudo-second-order rate expression has been widely applied to the Adsorption of pollutants from aqueous solutions onto adsorbents.
Book

Biosorption of Heavy Metals

TL;DR: The state of the art in the field of biosorption is reviewed, with many references to recent reviews and key individual contributions, and the composition of marine algae polysaccharide structures, which seem instrumental in metal uptake and binding are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of potentially low-cost sorbents for heavy metals

TL;DR: The use of low-cost sorbents has been investigated as a replacement for current costly methods of removing heavy metals from solution as mentioned in this paper, where natural materials or waste products from certain industries with a high capacity for heavy metals can be obtained, employed and disposed of with little cost.
Book

The Chemistry of Soils

TL;DR: The Chemical Composition of Soils as mentioned in this paper is a well-known topic in the field of soil chemistry, and it has been used extensively in the literature to study the properties of soil.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the biochemistry of heavy metal biosorption by brown algae

TL;DR: The emphasis is on outlining the biochemical properties of the brown algae that set them apart from other algal biosorbents, including alginate and fucoidan, which are chiefly responsible for heavy metal chelation.