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Optimization of sulfate leaching from Phosphogypsum for efficient bioreduction in a batch bioreactor using a sulfate-reducing microbial consortium.

Authors :
Danouche, M.
Bounaga, A.
Boulif, R.
Zeroual, Y.
Benhida, R.
Lyamlouli, K.
Source :
Chemical Engineering Journal. Nov2023, Vol. 475, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Display omitted] • Characterization of phosphogypsum and optimization of sulfate leaching. • Selection and evaluation of sulfate-reducing-bacterial consortia under challenging conditions. • High reduction of sulfate leached from PG in batch bioreactor with the isolated consortium. Phosphogypsum (PG) is generated annually from phosphoric acid production. This by-product contains 50% of sulfate (SO 4 2−), which can be recycled biologically. Biorecovery of elemental sulfur (S 0) involves firstly converting SO 4 2− into biogenic sulfide using sulfate-reducing bacteria under anaerobic conditions, then oxidizing the sulfide produced into S 0 using sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. This study focused on selecting and evaluating natural microbial consortia from SO 4 2− rich biotopes for their application in the initial first step of S 0 biorecovery. The PG sample was first comprehensively characterized using ICP-MS/OES, XRD, FTIR, and TGA analyses. Subsequently, SO 4 2− leaching optimization was performed through a design of experiments approach. The analysis revealed that CaSO 4 was the major component of the PG (78%), and the optimal parameters for leaching of SO 4 2− from PG were at a NaOH concentration of 7.4% and PG concentration of 158 g.L−1. Furthermore, the MYC-consortium isolated from a hydrothermal niche demonstrated the highest reduction capacity among the studied consortia. It also exhibited the highest performance under SO 4 2− concentrations up to 3.5 g.L−1, salinity levels up to 30 g.L−1, and in the presence of 60 ppm of Zn(II), 3 ppm of Cd(II), and 6 ppm of Pb(II). Moreover, this consortium showed a high capacity for reducing SO 4 2− in the bioreactor (90% after 6 weeks) when utilizing SO 4 2− from the PG-leached solution, as attested by the chemical analyses of the precipitate formed in the bioreactor. This research offers a comprehensive insight into the potential of MYC-consortium to convert leached SO 4 2− from PG into sulfide, which is the most critical step in the S 0 -biorecovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13858947
Volume :
475
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemical Engineering Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173233180
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2023.146072