User:Carmichaelsk/sandbox

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Test Place for editing things (Bioremediation text used as placeholder)[edit]

Bioremediation is the primary biotech issue created by the AMD acidophiles. There are a number of methods for dealing with AMD, some crude (such as raising pH through liming, removing water, binding iron with organic wastes) and some less so (application of bactericides, biocontrol with other bacteria/archaea, offsite wetland creation, use of metal-immobilising bacteria, galvanic suppression). A number of other neutralising agents are available (pulverised fuel ash-based grouts, cattle manure, whey, brewer's yeast) many which solve a waste disposal problem from another industry.[1]

As supplies of some metals dwindle, other methods of extraction are being explored, including the use of acidophiles, in a process known as bioleaching. Though slower than conventional methods, the microorganisms (which can also include fungi) enable the exploitation of extremely low grade ores with minimum expense.[2] Projects include nickel extraction with A.ferrooxidans and Aspergillus sp. fungi[2] and sulfur removal from coal with Acidithiobacillus sp..[3] The extraction can occur at the mine site, from waste water streams (or the main watercourse if the contamination has reached that far), in bioreactors, or at a power station (for instance to remove sulfur from coal before combustion to avoid sulfuric acid rain).


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References[edit]

  1. ^ Banks, David; Younger, Paul L.; Arnesen, Rolf-Tore; Iversen, Egil R.; Banks, S. B. (1997). "Mine-water chemistry: The good, the bad and the ugly". Environmental Geology. 32 (3): 157–74. doi:10.1007/s002540050204.
  2. ^ a b Mohapatra, S.; Bohidar, S.; Pradhan, N.; Kar, R.N.; Sukla, L.B. (2007). "Microbial extraction of nickel from Sukinda chromite overburden by Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and Aspergillus strains". Hydrometallurgy. 85: 1–8. doi:10.1016/j.hydromet.2006.07.001.
  3. ^ Rai, Charanjit; Reyniers, Jon P. (1988). "Microbial Desulfurization of Coals by Organisms of the Genus Pseudomonas". Biotechnology Progress. 4 (4): 225–30. doi:10.1002/btpr.5420040406.