首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Local monitoring of physicochemical, radiochemical, and microbiological parameters was performed in the deep horizons of the Severnyi site used for disposal of liquid radioactive waste (LRW). Analysis of the chemical and radiochemical composition of the wastes and formation fluid revealed that the boundary for migration of radionuclides lagged behind that for nonradioactive waste components (sodium nitrate) and tritium. The physicochemical and radiochemical conditions in deep horizons did not prevent microbial growth. The numbers of microorganisms (aerobic organotrophs, denitrifying, fermentative, sulfate-reducing, and methanogenic) were low, as were the rates of sulfate reduction and methanogenesis; they increased in the waste dispersion zone. The microorganisms from deep horizons were able to produce gases (CH4, CO2, N2, and H2S) from possible waste components. Denitrifying bacteria belonged to different Pseudomonas species and reduced nitrate to dinitrogen under the conditions of pH, salinity, temperature, and radioactivity found in the disposal site. These results suggest the need for control of microbiological processes in deep disposal site for liquid RW.  相似文献   

2.
The physicochemical conditions, composition of microbial communities, and the rates of anaerobic processes in the deep sand horizons used as a repository for liquid radioactive wastes (LRW) at the Siberian Chemical Combine (Seversk, Tomsk oblast), were studied. Formation waters from the observation wells drilled into the horizons used for the radioactive waste disposal were found to be inhabited by microorganisms of different physiological groups, including aerobic organotrophs, anaerobic fermentative, denitrifying, sulfate-reducing, and methanogenic bacteria. The density of microbial population, as determined by cultural methods, was low and usually did not exceed 104 cells/ml. Enrichment cultures of microorganisms producing gases (hydrogen, methane, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide) and capable of participation in the precipitation of metal sulfides were obtained from the waters of the disposal site. The contemporary processes of sulfate reduction and methanogenesis were assayed; the rates of these terminal processes of organic matter destruction were found to be low. The denitrifying bacteria from the deep repository were capable of reducing the nitrates contained in the wastes, provided sources of energy and biogenic elements were available. Biosorption of radionuclides by the biomass of aerobic bacteria isolated from groundwater was demonstrated. The results obtained give us insight into the functional structure of the microbial community inhabiting the waters of repository horizons. This study indicates that the numbers and activity of microbial cells are low both inside and outside the zone of radioactive waste dispersion, in spite of the long period of waste discharge.  相似文献   

3.
The potential for stimulating microbial U(VI) reduction as an in situ bioremediation strategy for uranium-contaminated groundwater was evaluated in uranium-contaminated sediment from the FRC, Oak Ridge, TN. Sediment was at low pH (pH 4) and contained high (55 mM) concentrations of nitrate. The addition of organic electron donors resulted in a slow removal of ca. 20% of the nitrate over 120 days with a concurrent increase in pH. Uranium precipitated during nitrate reduction. This precipitation of U(VI) was not due to its reduction to U(IV) because over 90% of the uranium in the sediments remained as U(VI). Studies in which the pH of the sediments was artificially raised suggested that an increase in pH alone could not account for the precipitation of the U(VI) during nitrate reduction. Metal-reducing bacteria were recovered from the sediments in enrichment cultures, but molecular analysis of the sediment demonstrated that the addition of electron donors did not stimulate the growth of these metal reducers. Thus, although U(VI) was precipitated from the groundwater with the simple addition of electron donors, most of the uranium in the sediments was in the form of U(VI), and thus was not effectively immobilized.  相似文献   

4.
The biogeochemical gradients that will develop across the interface between a highly alkaline cementitious geological disposal facility for intermediate level radioactive waste and the geosphere are poorly understood. In addition, there is a paucity of information about the microorganisms that may populate these environments and their role in biomineralization, gas consumption and generation, metal cycling, and on radionuclide speciation and solubility. In this study, we investigated the phylogenetic diversity of indigenous microbial communities and their potential for alkaline metal reduction in samples collected from a natural analogue for cementitious radioactive waste repositories, the hyperalkaline Allas Springs (pH up to 11.9), Troodos Mountains, Cyprus. The site is situated within an ophiolitic complex of ultrabasic rocks that are undergoing active low-temperature serpentinization, which results in hyperalkaline conditions. 16S rRNA cloning and sequencing showed that phylogenetically diverse microbial communities exist in this natural high pH environment, including Hydrogenophaga species. This indicates that alkali-tolerant hydrogen-oxidizing microorganisms could potentially colonize an alkaline geological repository, which is predicted to be rich in molecular H2, as a result of processes including steel corrosion and cellulose biodegradation within the wastes. Moreover, microbial metal reduction was confirmed at alkaline pH in this study by enrichment microcosms and by pure cultures of bacterial isolates affiliated to the Paenibacillus and Alkaliphilus genera. Overall, these data show that a diverse range of microbiological processes can occur in high pH environments, consistent with those expected during the geodisposal of intermediate level waste. Many of these, including gas metabolism and metal reduction, have clear implications for the long-term geological disposal of radioactive waste.  相似文献   

5.
We isolated four cultures of chromate resistant, unicellular, non-motile green algae from disposal sites of the paper-pulp and electroplating industries. These algae were maintained in Tris-acetate-glycerophosphate medium containing 30 μM K2Cr2O7. The morphological features as well as analysis of the 500-bp fragment of 18S rDNA (NS 12 region) showed that these isolates belong to Chlorella spp. These isolates showed EC50 values for chromate ranging from 60 to 125 μM. Uptake studies with radioactive 51Cr(VI) showed that 10–19% of total radioactivity was intracellular, and 1–2% was bound to the cell wall. The rest of the activity remained in the medium, suggesting that resistance was not related to accumulation of Cr(VI) in the cells. Interestingly, when these isolates were grown in the presence of 30 μM of K2Cr2O7, a decrease in the Cr(VI) concentration in the medium was observed. Only live cells could deplete Cr(VI) from the supernatant, suggesting the presence of chromium reduction activity in these Chlorella isolates. Cr(VI) reduction activity of the cells of Chlorella was stimulated by light as well as by acetate and glycerophosphate. Treatment of Chlorella cells with 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl),1,1dimethyl urea (DCMU) did not affect the Cr(VI) reduction. However, if the cells were treated with sodium azide, Cr(VI) reduction was severely affected. Though chromate resistance has been well documented in algae, the information on chromate reduction by algae is scant. This paper discusses the Cr(VI) reduction by Cr(VI) resistant Chlorella, which may find a use in the effective bioremediation of Cr(VI).  相似文献   

6.
Aims: To characterize the bacterial consortia and isolates selected for their role in hexavalent chromium removal by adsorption and reduction. Methods and Results: Bacterial consortia from industrial wastes revealed significant Cr(VI) removal after 15 days when incubated in medium M9 at pH 6·5 and 8·0. The results suggested chromium reduction. The bacterial consortia diversity (T‐RFLP based on 16S rRNA gene) indicated a highest number of operational taxonomic units in an alkaline carbonate medium mimicking in situ conditions. However, incubations under such conditions revealed low Cr(VI) removal. Genomic libraries were obtained for the consortia exhibiting optimal Cr(VI) removal (M9 medium at pH 6·5 and 8·0). They revealed the dominance of 16S rRNA gene sequences related to the genera Pseudomonas/Stenotrophomonas or Enterobacter/Halomonas, respectively. Isolates related to Pseudomonas fluorescens and Enterobacter aerogenes were efficient in Cr(VI) reduction and adsorption to the biomass. Conclusions: Cr(VI) reduction was better at neutral pH rather than under in situ conditions (alkaline pH with carbonate). Isolated strains exhibited significant capacity for Cr(VI) reduction and adsorption. Significance and Impact of Study: Bacterial communities from chromium‐contaminated industrial wastes as well as isolates were able to remove Cr(VI). The results suggest a good potential for bioremediation of industrial wastes when optimal conditions are applied.  相似文献   

7.
The biological reduction of soluble U(VI) to the less soluble U(IV) has been proposed as a strategy to remediate uranium-contaminated sites. However, the majority of the contaminated sites contain, in addition to U(VI), competing electron acceptors (CEAs) that can either enhance or inhibit U(VI) reduction. Desulfotomaculum reducens MI-1 is a sulfate-reducing bacterium able to reduce a variety of electron acceptors including U(VI). We characterized U(VI) reduction by D. reducens in the presence of pyruvate and three CEAs: sulfate, nitrate or soluble ferric iron. In the presence of sulfate or ferric iron and U(VI), cell growth was driven by respiration of the CEA. Nitrate was not used as an electron acceptor for growth and vegetative cells grew instead by fermenting pyruvate. Sulfate remaining after sulfate reduction has ceased or the presence of nitrate did not affect U(VI) reduction. However, in the case of sulfate, the addition of H2 after the depletion of pyruvate greatly enhanced U(VI) reduction. Contrary to sulfate and nitrate, the presence of Fe(II), the product of Fe(III) reduction, abolished U(VI) reduction. The results from this investigation suggest that this microorganism and others with similar characteristics may play a role in U(VI) bioremediation efforts but only after the soluble Fe(II) produced by Fe(III) reduction has been advected away.  相似文献   

8.
In investigation the process of composition sediment of liquid unorganic radioactive waste, that are forming in cistern-selectors at PNPI RAS, it was discovered apart from great quantity of ions of different metals and radionuclides considerable maintenance of organic material (to 30% and more from volume of sediment) unknown origin. A supposition was made about its microbiological origin. Investigation shows, that the main microorganisms, setting this sediment, are the bacterious of Pseudomonas kind, capable of effectively bind in process of grow the radionuclide 90Sr, that confirms the potential posibility of using this microorganisms for bioremediation of liquid low radioactive wastes (LRW).  相似文献   

9.
The physicochemical conditions, composition of microbial communities, and the rates of anaerobic processes in the deep sandy horizons used as a repository for liquid radioactive wastes (LRW) at the Siberian Chemical Combine (Seversk, Tomsk oblast), were studied. Formation waters from the observation wells drilled into the production horizons of the radioactive waste disposal site were found to be inhabited by microorganisms of different physiological groups, including aerobic organotrophs, anaerobic fermentative, denitrifying, sulfate-reducing, and methanogenic bacteria. The density of microbial population, as determined by cultural methods, was low and usually did not exceed 10(4) cells/ml. Enrichment cultures of microorganisms producing gases (hydrogen, methane, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide) and capable of participation in the precipitation of metal sulfides were obtained from the waters of production horizons. The contemporary processes of sulfate reduction and methanogenesis were assayed; the rates of these terminal processes of organic matter destruction were found to be low. The denitrifying bacteria from the underground repository were capable of reducing the nitrates contained in the wastes, provided sources of energy and biogenic elements were available. Biosorption of radionuclides by the biomass of aerobic bacteria isolated from groundwater was demonstrated. The results obtained give us insight into the functional structure of the microbial community inhabiting the waters of repository production horizons. This study indicates that the numbers and activity of microbial cells are low both inside and outside the zone of radioactive waste dispersion, in spite of the long period of waste discharge.  相似文献   

10.
The bioremediation of uranium‐contaminated sites is designed to stimulate the activity of microorganisms able to catalyze the reduction of soluble U(VI) to the less soluble mineral UO2. U(VI) reduction does not necessarily support growth in previously studied bacteria, but it typically involves viable vegetative cells and the presence of an appropriate electron donor. We characterized U(VI) reduction by the sulfate‐reducing bacterium Desulfotomaculum reducens strain MI‐1 grown fermentatively on pyruvate and observed that spores were capable of U(VI) reduction. Hydrogen gas – a product of pyruvate fermentation – rather than pyruvate, served as the electron donor. The presence of spent growth medium was required for the process, suggesting that an unknown factor produced by the cells was necessary for reduction. Ultrafiltration of the spent medium followed by U(VI) reduction assays revealed that the factor's molecular size was below 3 kDa. Pre‐reduced spent medium displayed short‐term U(VI) reduction activity, suggesting that the missing factor may be an electron shuttle, but neither anthraquinone‐2,6‐disulfonic acid nor riboflavin rescued spore activity in fresh medium. Spores of D. reducens also reduced Fe(III)‐citrate under experimental conditions similar to those for U(VI) reduction. This is the first report of a bacterium able to reduce metals while in a sporulated state and underscores the novel nature of the mechanism of metal reduction by strain MI‐1.  相似文献   

11.
A characterization of the Shiprock, NM, uranium mill tailing site focused on the geochemical and microbiological factors governing in-situ uranium-redox reactions. Groundwater and aqueous extracts of sediment samples contained a wide concentration range of sulfate, nitrate, and U(VI) with median values of 21.2 mM, 16.1 µM, and 2.7 µM, respectively. Iron(III) was not detected in groundwater, but a median value of 0.3 mM in sediment extracts was measured. Bacterial diversity down gradient from the disposal pile reflected the predominant geochemistry with relatively high numbers of sulfate- and nitrate-reducing microorganisms, and smaller numbers of acetogenic, methanogenic, nitrate-dependent Fe(II)-oxidizing, Fe(III)-reducing, and sulfide-oxidizing bacteria. In aquifer slurry incubations, nitrate reduction was always preferred and had a negative impact on sulfate-, Fe(III)-, and U-reduction rates. We also found that sulfate-reduction rates decreased sharply in the presence of clay, while Fe(III)-reduction increased with no clear impact on U reduction. In the absence of clay, iron and sulfate reduction correlated with concentrations of Fe(III) and sulfate, respectively. Rates of U(VI) loss did not correlate with the concentration of any electron acceptor. With the exception of Fe(III), electron donor amendment was largely unsuccessful in stimulating electron acceptor loss over a 2-week incubation period, suggesting that endogenous forms of organic matter were sufficient to support microbial activity. Our findings suggest that efforts to accelerate biological U reduction should initially focus on stimulating nitrate removal.  相似文献   

12.
The remediation of uranium from soils and groundwater at Department of Energy (DOE) sites across the United States represents a major environmental issue, and bioremediation has exhibited great potential as a strategy to immobilize U in the subsurface. The bioreduction of U(VI) to insoluble U(IV) uraninite has been proposed to be an effective bioremediation process in anaerobic conditions. However, high concentrations of nitrate and low pH found in some contaminated areas have been shown to limit the efficiency of microbial reduction of uranium. In the present study, nonreductive uranium biomineralization promoted by microbial phosphatase activity was investigated in anaerobic conditions in the presence of high nitrate and low pH as an alternative approach to the bioreduction of U(VI). A facultative anaerobe, Rahnella sp. Y9602, isolated from soils at DOE's Oak Ridge Field Research Center (ORFRC), was able to respire anaerobically on nitrate as a terminal electron acceptor in the presence of glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) as the sole carbon and phosphorus source and hydrolyzed sufficient phosphate to precipitate 95% total uranium after 120 hours in synthetic groundwater at pH 5.5. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction and X-ray absorption spectroscopy identified the mineral formed as chernikovite, a U(VI) autunite-type mineral. The results of this study suggest that in contaminated subsurfaces, such as at the ORFRC, where high concentrations of nitrate and low pH may limit uranium bioreduction, the biomineralization of U(VI) phosphate minerals may be a more attractive approach for in situ remediation providing that a source of organophosphate is supplied for bioremediation.  相似文献   

13.
A radioactive liquid waste repository was found to be the habitat of a rich microbial community with a high catabolic potential. Groundwater from a depth of 162–189 m contained aerobic saprotrophic and anaerobic fermentative, sulfate-reducing, and denitrifying bacteria. Nitrate-reducing bacteria residing in this groundwater were isolated in pure cultures. Based on the results of their physiological studies, 16S rRNA sequencing, and phylogenetic analysis, the microorganisms isolated were ascribed to one phylogenetic branch, the γ-subclass of gram-negative bacteria. Among six isolates, four belonged to the genusAcinetobacter, whereas two others belonged to the generaComamonas andAeromonas. The data obtained indicate that the microflora of the repository can exert a certain effect on the chemical composition of the formation fluids and bearing rocks, as well as on the migration of radionuclides  相似文献   

14.
The anoxic, alkaline hydrolysis of cellulosic materials generates a range of cellulose degradation products (CDP) including α and β forms of isosaccharinic acid (ISA) and is expected to occur in radioactive waste disposal sites receiving intermediate level radioactive wastes. The generation of ISA''s is of particular relevance to the disposal of these wastes since they are able to form complexes with radioelements such as Pu enhancing their migration. This study demonstrates that microbial communities present in near-surface anoxic sediments are able to degrade CDP including both forms of ISA via iron reduction, sulphate reduction and methanogenesis, without any prior exposure to these substrates. No significant difference (n = 6, p = 0.118) in α and β ISA degradation rates were seen under either iron reducing, sulphate reducing or methanogenic conditions, giving an overall mean degradation rate of 4.7×10−2 hr−1 (SE±2.9×10−3). These results suggest that a radioactive waste disposal site is likely to be colonised by organisms able to degrade CDP and associated ISA''s during the construction and operational phase of the facility.  相似文献   

15.
Intermediate-level radioactive waste (ILW), which dominates the radioactive waste inventory in the United Kingdom on a volumetric basis, is proposed to be disposed of via a multibarrier deep geological disposal facility (GDF). ILW is a heterogeneous wasteform that contains substantial amounts of cellulosic material encased in concrete. Upon resaturation of the facility with groundwater, alkali conditions will dominate and will lead to the chemical degradation of cellulose, producing a substantial amount of organic co-contaminants, particularly isosaccharinic acid (ISA). ISA can form soluble complexes with radionuclides, thereby mobilising them and posing a potential threat to the surrounding environment or ‘far field''. Alkaliphilic microorganisms sampled from a legacy lime working site, which is an analogue for an ILW-GDF, were able to degrade ISA and couple this degradation to the reduction of electron acceptors that will dominate as the GDF progresses from an aerobic ‘open phase'' through nitrate- and Fe(III)-reducing conditions post closure. Furthermore, pyrosequencing analyses showed that bacterial diversity declined as the reduction potential of the electron acceptor decreased and that more specialised organisms dominated under anaerobic conditions. These results imply that the microbial attenuation of ISA and comparable organic complexants, initially present or formed in situ, may play a role in reducing the mobility of radionuclides from an ILW-GDF, facilitating the reduction of undue pessimism in the long-term performance assessment of such facilities.  相似文献   

16.
Removal of hexavalent uranium (U(VI)) from aqueous solution was studied using a Gram‐positive facultative anaerobe, Cellulomonas sp. strain ES6, under anaerobic, non‐growth conditions in bicarbonate and PIPES buffers. Inorganic phosphate was released by cells during the experiments providing ligands for formation of insoluble U(VI) phosphates. Phosphate release was most probably the result of anaerobic hydrolysis of intracellular polyphosphates accumulated by ES6 during aerobic growth. Microbial reduction of U(VI) to U(IV) was also observed. However, the relative magnitudes of U(VI) removal by abiotic (phosphate‐based) precipitation and microbial reduction depended on the buffer chemistry. In bicarbonate buffer, X‐ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy showed that U in the solid phase was present primarily as a non‐uraninite U(IV) phase, whereas in PIPES buffer, U precipitates consisted primarily of U(VI)‐phosphate. In both bicarbonate and PIPES buffer, net release of cellular phosphate was measured to be lower than that observed in U‐free controls suggesting simultaneous precipitation of U and PO. In PIPES, U(VI) phosphates formed a significant portion of U precipitates and mass balance estimates of U and P along with XAFS data corroborate this hypothesis. High‐resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR‐TEM) and energy dispersive X‐ray spectroscopy (EDS) of samples from PIPES treatments indeed showed both extracellular and intracellular accumulation of U solids with nanometer sized lath structures that contained U and P. In bicarbonate, however, more phosphate was removed than required to stoichiometrically balance the U(VI)/U(IV) fraction determined by XAFS, suggesting that U(IV) precipitated together with phosphate in this system. When anthraquinone‐2,6‐disulfonate (AQDS), a known electron shuttle, was added to the experimental reactors, the dominant removal mechanism in both buffers was reduction to a non‐uraninite U(IV) phase. Uranium immobilization by abiotic precipitation or microbial reduction has been extensively reported; however, the present work suggests that strain ES6 can remove U(VI) from solution simultaneously through precipitation with phosphate ligands and microbial reduction, depending on the environmental conditions. Cellulomonadaceae are environmentally relevant subsurface bacteria and here, for the first time, the presence of multiple U immobilization mechanisms within one organism is reported using Cellulomonas sp. strain ES6. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2011;108: 264–276. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Stimulating microbial reduction of soluble U(VI) to insoluble U(IV) shows promise as a strategy for immobilizing uranium in uranium-contaminated subsurface environments. In order to learn more about which microorganisms might be involved in U(VI) reduction in situ, the changes in the microbial community when U(VI) reduction was stimulated with the addition of acetate were monitored in sediments from three different uranium-contaminated sites in the floodplain of the San Juan River in Shiprock, N.Mex. In all three sediments U(VI) reduction was accompanied by concurrent Fe(III) reduction and a dramatic enrichment of microorganisms in the family Geobacteraceae, which are known U(VI)- and Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms. At the point when U(VI) reduction and Fe(III) reduction were nearing completion, Geobacteraceae accounted for ca. 40% of the 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences recovered from the sediments with bacterial PCR primers, whereas Geobacteraceae accounted for fewer than 5% of the 16S rDNA sequences in control sediments that were not amended with acetate and in which U(VI) and Fe(III) reduction were not stimulated. Between 55 and 65% of these Geobacteraceae sequences were most similar to sequences from Desulfuromonas species, with the remainder being most closely related to Geobacter species. Quantitative analysis of Geobacteraceae sequences with most-probable-number PCR and TaqMan analyses indicated that the number of Geobacteraceae sequences increased from 2 to 4 orders of magnitude over the course of U(VI) and Fe(III) reduction in the acetate-amended sediments from the three sites. No increase in Geobacteraceae sequences was observed in control sediments. In contrast to the predominance of Geobacteraceae sequences, no sequences related to other known Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms were detected in sediments. These results compare favorably with an increasing number of studies which have demonstrated that Geobacteraceae are important components of the microbial community in a diversity of subsurface environments in which Fe(III) reduction is an important process. The combination of these results with the finding that U(VI) reduction takes place during Fe(III) reduction and prior to sulfate reduction suggests that Geobacteraceae will be responsible for much of the Fe(III) and U(VI) reduction during uranium bioremediation in these sediments.  相似文献   

18.
Dmitrenko  G. N.  Konovalova  V. V.  Shum  O. A. 《Microbiology》2003,72(3):327-330
Non-nitrate-reducing collection bacteria from the genus Pseudomonas were found to be able to use hexavalent chromium as a terminal electron acceptor. The reduction of Cr(VI) was accompanied by an increase in the cell biomass. At Cr(VI) concentrations in the medium lower than 15 mg/l, the non-nitrate-reducing pseudomonads reduced Cr(VI) less efficiently than did denitrifying pseudomonads. In contrast, at Cr(VI) concentrations higher than 30 mg/l, Cr(VI) was reduced more efficiently by the non-nitrate-reducing pseudomonads than by the denitrifying pseudomonads.  相似文献   

19.
As anaerobic microbial metabolism can have a major impact on radionuclide speciation and mobility in the subsurface, the solubility of uranium, technetium and radium was determined in microcosms prepared from sediments adjacent to the Drigg low-level radioactive waste storage site (UK). Both uranium (as U(VI);     ) and Tc (as Tc(VII);     ) were removed from groundwater concurrently with microbial Fe(III) reduction, presumably through reduction to insoluble U(IV) and Tc(IV), respectively, while Ra (Ra2+) that had rapidly sorbed onto mineral surfaces was not released following Fe(III) reduction. Biogenic Fe(II) minerals in reduced Drigg sediments were unable to reduce U(VI) abiotically but could reduce Tc(VII). Following addition of the oxidant nitrate to the reduced sediments, uranium was remobilized and released into solution, whereas technetium remained associated with an insoluble phase. A close relative of Pseudomonas stutzeri dominated the microbial communities under denitrifying conditions, reducing nitrate to nitrite in the microcosms, which was able to reoxidize Fe(II) and U(IV), with release of the latter into solution as U(VI). These data suggest that microbial Fe(III) reduction in the far-field at Drigg has the potential to decrease the migration of some radionuclides in the subsurface, and the potential for reoxidation and remobilization by nitrate, a common contaminant in nuclear waste streams, is radionuclide-specific.  相似文献   

20.
Microbial bioreduction of radionuclides has been the subject of much recent interest, in particular as a method for the in situ bioremediation of uranium contaminated sites. However, there have been very few studies investigating the microbially mediated redox transformations of plutonium. The redox chemistry of Pu is complicated, but the dominant environmental oxidation state is insoluble Pu(IV). However, microbial reduction of Pu(IV) to more soluble Pu(III) may enhance migration of Pu in the environment. In this study we investigated the effect of two model metal-reducing bacteria, Geobacter sulfurreducens and Shewanella oneidensis, on the redox speciation of Pu. Our results show that in all cases, the presence of bacterial cells enhanced removal of Pu from solution. UV/Visible spectra of cells and precipitates formed (dissolved in 1 M HCl), showed that the sorbed and precipitated Pu was mainly Pu(IV), but Pu(III) was also present. The results suggest that the mechanism of interaction between Pu(IV) and the two microorganisms is initial sorption to the cell surface, followed by slow reduction. Although both bacteria could reduce Pu(IV) to Pu(III), there was no increase in the solution concentrations of Pu. This suggests that the potential reduction of sorbed Pu(IV) in sediments that have been stimulated to bioremediate U(VI) may not result in problematic mobilization of Pu(III).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号