Publication | Open Access
Stabilization of Uranium(VI) at Low pH by Fungal Metabolites: Applications in Environmental Biotechnology
12
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
EngineeringEnvironmental BiotechnologyFungal MetabolitesSoil MineralogyUranium ContaminationSoil BiochemistryOrganic GeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringLow PhBioremediationEnvironmental MicrobiologySoil BioremediationBiogeochemistryFungal StrainGroundwater HydrogeochemistryEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental MineralogySoil ChemistryPhytoremediationEnvironmental RemediationGeochemistry
Uranium contamination of soils and water is a worldwide problem due to geology or anthropogenic release such as mining, or use of inorganic fertilizers. In situ remediation of low and moderately contaminated sites is a complicated procedure due to the complex chemistry of uranium. This study demonstrates that at pH 3.5, a fungal strain isolated from unprocessed uranium bearing shale creates hydrochemical conditions that immobilize 97% of a total of 10 mg L-1 dissolved uranium in a 0.20 μm pore system. The redistribution occurred within 10 minutes and remained for five weeks and just 12% of the inventory was retrieved in the biomass. Size exclusion chromatography of the dissolved phase identified organic substances in the range of more than 60 kD down to 100 D as a response to time of incubation. Geochemical modeling indicates formation of uranium-organic complexes where ligand size, coordination chemistry and their tendency to agglomerate determine the redistribution.
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