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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical and biological removal of cyanides from aqueous and soil-containing systems

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TLDR
In this article, a study was conducted to determine the effect of various factors on the rate and extent of potassium cyanide and hexacyanoferrate (II, complex form) removal from aqueous and soil-containing systems.
Abstract
A study was conducted to determine the effect of various factors on the rate and extent of potassium cyanide and potassium hexacyanoferrate (II, complex form) removal from aqueous and soil-containing systems. In a sterile aqueous system at neutral pH, the concentration of free cyanide was reduced by 42% in 334 h as a result of the protonation of CN− and the volatilization of the HCN formed. In the presence of aerobic mixed consortium of the Institute of Gas Technology and a methylotrophic culture, Isolate 3, the concentration of free cyanide was reduced by 59% and 66% in 357 h, respectively, as a result of combined chemical conversion and microbial degradation. In the sterile aqueous system amended initially with the complex form of cyanide, a less-than-20% reduction in cyanide occured. The sorption equilibria for free and complex cyanides in slurries of the topsoil and manufactured gas plant (MGP) soil was reached in less than 22 and 4 days, respectively. The extent of desorption of cyanides from topsoil and MGP soil into water decreased with time. In sterile systems containing topsoil and MGP soil that were previously equilibrated to cyanides, only a 2% reduction in cyanide concentration occurred in 336 h due to chemical conversion. In the presence of microbial cultures, the concentration of cyanide was reduced by less than 15% and 7% in the slurries of topsoil and MGP soil, respectively. The comparison of the rate and extent of cyanide removal from the aqueous and soil-containing systems in the presence of micro-organisms suggests that cyanides were retained by the solid phase of the soil-containing systems and therefore were less available for biodegradation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biological degradation of cyanide compounds.

TL;DR: Significant advances have been reported in the use of plants for the phytoremediation of cyanide compounds and evidence for the biodegradation of thiocyanate and metal-cyanide complexes has become available, however, physical and economic factors still limit the application of cyanides biodegrades.
Journal ArticleDOI

The fate of cyanide in leach wastes at gold mines: An environmental perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the basic chemistry of cyanide, methods by which cyanide can be analyzed, and aspects of the cyanide behavior that are most relevant to environmental considerations at mineral processing operations associated with gold mines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combined carbon and nitrogen removal from acetonitrile using algal-bacterial bioreactors.

TL;DR: This study suggests that complete removal of N-organics can be combined with a significant removal of nitrogen by using algal–bacterial systems and that further residual biomass digestion could pay-back part of the operation costs of the treatment plant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transport and metabolism of free cyanide and iron cyanide complexes by willow

TL;DR: The data suggest that phytoremediation of cyanide may be possible and ecologically safe due to the lack of cyanine bioaccumulation in aerial tissues, and ferrocyanide uptake and metabolism is suggestive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biosorption of iron(III)–cyanide complex anions to Rhizopus arrhizus: application of adsorption isotherms

TL;DR: In this article, the binding capacity of the biosorbent was investigated as a function of the initial pH, initial iron(III)-cyanide complex ion and biosorbents concentration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cyanide Metabolism by Bacillus megaterium

TL;DR: Results from this and other experiments collectively support the hypothesis that a metabolic pathway in this organism begins with the condensation of serine and cyanide to form β-cyanoalanine which in turn is hydrolyzed to asparagine and then to aspartic acid.
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Cyanide resistance and cyanide utilization by a strain of Bacillus pumilus

TL;DR: A strain of Bacillus pumilus was isolated from Fargo clay in a field near Fargo, North Dakota, which had been cropped in flax 73 consecutive years, showing an unusual ability to survive in clay.
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Anaerobic biodegradation of cyanide under methanogenic conditions.

TL;DR: Upflow, anaerobic, fixed-bed, activated charcoal biotreatment columns capable of operating at free cyanide concentrations of greater than 100 mg liter-1 with a hydraulic retention time of less than 48 h were developed and strongly complexed cyanides were resistant to removal.
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Modification of atrzine desorption during field incubation experiments

TL;DR: The effect of field aging on atrazine desorption was determined in this paper, where 14 C-ring labelled atrazines were applied to the top of soil columns in field plots.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conversion of sodium cyanide to carbon dioxide and ammonia by immobilized cells of Pseudomonas putida

TL;DR: Results indicated that the alginate-immobilized cells ofP.
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