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Dye Decolourisation Using Two Klebsiella Strains.

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TLDR
This study aimed to decolourise different dyes using two Klebsiella strains (Bz4 and Rz7) in different concentrations and incubation conditions and noticed significant effect of the process conditions.
Abstract
This study aimed to decolourise different dyes using two Klebsiella strains (Bz4 and Rz7) in different concentrations and incubation conditions. Azo (Evans blue (EB)) and triphenylmethane (brilliant green (BG)) dyes were used individually and in mixture. The toxicity of the biotransformation products was estimated. Both strains had a significant potential to decolourise the dyes in the fluorone, azo and triphenylmethane classes. The type and concentration of dye affects the decolourisation effectiveness. Differences in the dye removal potential were observed particularly in the main experiment. The best results were obtained for Bz4 in the samples with EB (up to 95.4 %) and dye mixture (up to 99 %) and for Rz7 with BG (100 %). The living and dead biomass of the strain Bz4 highly absorbs the dyes. Significant effect of the process conditions was noticed for both strains. The best results were obtained in static and semistatic samples (89–99 %) for the removal of EB and a mixture of dyes and in static samples (100 %) for BG. The decrease in zootoxicity (from class IV/V) was noticed in all samples with living biomass of the strain Bz4 (to class III/IV) and in samples with single dyes for Rz7 (to class III/IV). The decrease in phytotoxicity (from class III/IV) was noticed for Bz4 in the samples with BG and a mixture (to class III) and for Rz7 in the samples with BG (to class III). The process conditions did not affect the changes in toxicity after the process.

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Water, air and soil pollution

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Biodegradation of Crystal Violet dye by bacteria isolated from textile industry effluents.

TL;DR: The efficiency of degrading triphenylmethane dye by this isolate, minus the supply of extra carbon or nitrogen sources in the media, highlights the significance of larger-scale treatment of textile effluent.
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Statistical optimization for the efficacious degradation of reactive azo dyes using Acinetobacter baumannii JC359.

TL;DR: The biodegradation of these reactive azo dyes was found to be a suitable alternative for the effective treatment of textile dye treatment using bacteria Acinetobacter baumannii JC359.
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Biodegradation and decolorization of azo dyes by adherent Staphylococcus lentus strain

TL;DR: The phytotoxicity of the dye solutions resulting from this treatment shows lower toxic nature compared to untreated solution of the respective dyes and FTIR and UV–Vis analyses confirm biodegradation potential of the tested strain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Possibilities of Obtaining from Highly Polluted Environments: New Bacterial Strains with a Significant Decolorization Potential of Different Synthetic Dyes.

TL;DR: Results of the study showed that water from polluted river as well as municipal wastewaters may be a precious source for isolation of bacterial strains with the wide spectrum and high decolorization potential.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Removal of synthetic dyes from wastewaters: a review.

TL;DR: The various methods of removal of synthetic dyes from waters and wastewater, employing activated sludge, pure cultures and microbe consortiums are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial decolorization of textile-dye-containing effluents A review

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of biological decolorization of dyes used in textile industries and report on progress and limitations is presented, where the ability of microorganisms to carry out dye decolorisation has received much attention.
Journal ArticleDOI

The removal of colour from textile wastewater using whole bacterial cells: a review

TL;DR: The use of whole bacterial cells for the reduction of water-soluble dyes present in textile dyeing wastewater has been investigated in this paper, with a focus on the use of bacteria-polymer composites for the removal of colour from reactive dye effluents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial decolorization and degradation of azo dyes: a review.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of bacterial decolorization/degradation of azo dyes and emphasize the application of these processes for the treatment of the azo dye-containing wastewaters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Basic and applied aspects in the microbial degradation of azo dyes

TL;DR: Several (laboratory-scale) continuous anaerobic/aerobic processes for the treatment of wastewaters containing azo dyes have recently been described.
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