Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Use of immobilized bacteria for environmental bioremediation: A review
ID_Doc 8751
Authors Mehrotra, T; Dev, S; Banerjee, A; Chatterjee, A; Singh, R; Aggarwal, S
Title Use of immobilized bacteria for environmental bioremediation: A review
Year 2021
Published Journal Of Environmental Chemical Engineering, 9.0, 5
Abstract Bioremediation is traditionally carried out using 'free' bacterial cells; however, in recent years, utilization of 'immobilized' bacterial cells has gained attention as a promising technique due to multifarious benefits. This review collates a vast amount of existing literature on the myriad contaminants treated using immobilized bacteria. We also discuss various mechanistic aspects of using immobilized cells for environmental remediation applications, with special attention on cells encapsulated in hydrogels and their implementation in detoxifying harmful contaminants and environmental cleanup. We examine different methods/techniques for immobilizing viable bacterial cells in various supporting matrices, use of single- and multi-species bacterial communities, various growth substrates, and factors affecting the remediation process including mass transfer, kinetic processes and bioreactor configurations used in pilot and field-scale applications. The advantages and limitations associated with the use of immobilized bacteria in a bioreactor for contaminated water treatment are also discussed. From a sustainable futures perspective, resource recovery and retrieval of value-added products along with bioremediation could be an added benefit of the immobilized cell-based treatment system, making it a more cost-effective and viable treatment strategy as well as one that is amenable to the principles of circular economy.
PDF
No similar articles found.
Scroll