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Τρίτη 26 Σεπτεμβρίου 2017

Degradation of the Recalcitrant Oil Spill Components Anthracene and Pyrene by a Microbially-Driven Fenton Reaction

Abstract
Oil spill components include a range of toxic saturated, aromatic, and polar hydrocarbons, including pyrene and anthracene. Such contaminants harm natural ecosystems, adversely affect human health, and negatively impact tourism and the fishing industries. Current physical, chemical, and biological remediation technologies are often unable to completely remove recalcitrant oil spill components, which accumulate at levels greater than regulatory limits set by the EPA. In the present study, a microbially-driven Fenton reaction, previously shown to produce hydroxyl (HO) radicals that degrade chlorinated solvents and associated solvent stabilizers, was also found to degrade source zone concentrations of the oil spill components pyrene (10 μM) and anthracene (1 μM) at initial rates of 0.82 and 0.20 μM h−1 respectively. The pyrene- and anthracene-degrading Fenton reaction was driven by the metal-reducing facultative anaerobe Shewanella oneidensis exposed to alternating aerobic and anaerobic conditions in the presence of Fe(III). Similar to the chlorinated solvent degradation system, the pyrene and anthracene degradation systems required neither the continual supply of exogenous H2O2 nor UV-induced Fe(III) reduction to regenerate Fe(II). The microbially-driven Fenton reaction provides the foundation for development of alternate ex situ and in situ oil and gas spill remediation technologies.

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