Kaan Poyraz Civil Engineering – Environmental Engineering.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 17 Environmental Biotechnology People need a good environment to be healthy and happy. The average person in the U.S. creates 4.3 pounds of solid.
Advertisements

How Do Engineered Systems Prevent and Manage Pollution in Water and Soil? … and what is the relevance to biotechnologists? The demand for employees with.
Web-based Class Project on Geoenvironmental Remediation Report prepared as part of course CEE 549: Geoenvironmental Engineering Winter 2013 Semester Instructor:
Bioremediation.
BIOREMEDIATION Jiří Mikeš.
Unlikely Remediator: Engineering D. radiodurans for toxic metal cleanup Morgan Etheridge.
Chapter Contents 1. What Is Bioremediation? 2. Bioremediation Basics
What is bioremediation?
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
Hazardous waste. Threatens human health or the environment in some way because it is –toxic –chemically active –corrosive –flammable –or some combination.
Bioremediation of contaminated soil. ..our focus is service…guaranteed! Root causes of oil spillages and site contamination Hose failures on mining machines.
Carolina Science Supply.  The activities in this kit are intended to simulate how oil-degrading microbes can be used to break down petroleum after oceanic.
BIOREMEDIATION By: Christina Dimitrijevic, Rachel Brown & Ola Johnston.
Melody Audet Wil Fakaosita Eresalem Ocbazgi. The use or alteration of cells or biological molecules for specific applications   Specifically the manipulation.
Bioremediation Use of bacteria to clean up (detoxify) pollution Contained wastes (in a factory, in tanks) Contaminated sites soil Water Other technologies.
C. Remediation of groundwater contaminants
Lec # 16 Environmental Biotechnology
OH NO!! OIL SPILL!!! Environmental Science Friday March 30 th 2012.
BIOTECHNOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENT
Hazardous Waste/ Bioremediation
SCH 3U- Detox for Contaminated Land
Chapter 9 Bioremediation.
What is Bioremediation?
Bioremediation. Hydraulic Fracturing Why do we even need it? We can’t seem to stop polluting –Inorganics Uranium, technetium, sulfur, sulfuric acid –Explosives.
Environmental Studies Dr Anupam Agarwal. Composition of Soil: Soils are a mixture of different things; rocks, minerals, and dead, decaying plants and.
TURNING BROWNFIELDS. Definition US EPA 1997 abandoned, idled or under-used industrial and commercial facilities where expansion or redevelopment is complicated.
Bioremediation By: Austin Anderson Materials Science 3344 Fall 2006.
INTRODUCTION TO BIOREMEDIATION
Instruments By Glory Basumata (MSc Applied Genetics) 2011.
Bioremediation-From the Lab to the Field
Ch Water Sustainability through Science and Technology.
Bioremediation Definition: Use of living organisms to transform, destroy or immobilize contaminants Goal: Detoxification of the parent compound(s) and.
1 Groundwater Pollution Using the characteristics of living things as tools for environmental improvement - exercises & case studies.
Ecology. THE BASIC PROBLEM: RELEASE OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS Enormous quantities of organic & inorganic compounds are released into the environment each.
Groundwater Pollution
Brownfield Remediation Clean-up Part III. Urban agriculture Has potential to improve the quality of life in urban areas by increasing food security, providing.
Biotechnology in Environmental Science Objective 5.02: Understand biotechnology in the environmental science industry.
BIOREMEDIATION IN PARTS CLEANING
Bioremediation and Bionanotechnology
Soil pollution 12/19/20151ENVR-303. First effect of pollutants Washed awayWashed away: might accumulates somewhere Evaporate:Evaporate: can be a source.
인간의 삶과 역사 속의 미생물 학기 강의자료 ppt-10. 미생물은 어떤 존재인가 ?
MIC 303 INDUSTRIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Principles of Biotechnology Objective Biotechnology defined Biotechnology- “Any technique that uses living organisms (or parts of organisms) to.
A treatment process that uses microorganisms (yeast, fungi, or bacteria) to break down, or degrade, hazardous substances into less toxic or nontoxic substances.
Ocean Pollution. What is pollution? Pollution occurs when an environment is contaminated, or dirtied, by waste, chemicals, trash, and other harmful substances.
Biotechnology. What Is Biotechnology? Using scientific methods with organisms to produce or modify new products or new forms of organisms Used to improve.
Bioremediation A technology that encourages growth and reproduction of indigenous microorganisms (bacteria and fungi) to enhance biodegradation of organic.
BIOREMEDIATION Sage Lincoln.
Bioremediation. Biotechnology and the Environment  Environment – describes everything that surrounds a particular organism Other organisms Soil, air,
Bioremediation and Phytoremediation: Natural Methods for Toxic Clean-Up 1. AUTHORS AND CONTEXT: Randelle Bundy, Scripps Institution of Oceanography,
Cleaning up the world one spill at a time!
GO C3Analyze and Evaluate Mechanisms Affecting the Distribution of Potentially Harmful Substances within an Environment. 3.2 Changing the Concentration.
Ecological Footprints. What are humanity's effects on the Earth's ecosystems? ● Our ecological footprint is the land area and water that we require for.
CO 2 (g) CO 2 (aq) H2OH2O H 2 CO 3 ? HCO 3 – ? CO 3 2- CaCO 3 (s) limestone Ca 2+ Put all of the compounds in the correct order for the functioning Carbonate.
Bioremediation.
Bioremediation Dr. Bhavesh Patel (M.Sc., Ph.D.) Principal
Environmental Biotechnology
BIOREMEDIATION Of HEAVY METALS (Copper; Cu)
PRESENTATION TOPIC CONTAMINATED LAND AND BIOREMEDIATION
Industrial and Environmental Biotechnology Terms
TITLE: BIOTERRORISM, BIODEGRADATION AND BIOREMEDIATION
Beyond Green Cleaning (PTY) Ltd has been appointed the sole distributor of Clift Industries products in South Africa and other countries throughout Sub.
Bioremediation.
Biological interventions
Environmental Biotechnology
A Recent Technique for Contaminated Soils: Bioremediation
강의자료 ppt-11 인간의 삶과 역사 속의 미생물 학기.
ENVIRONMENTAL REMEDIATION OF A CONTAMINATED OIL FIELD
Bioremediation Use of bacteria to clean up (detoxify) pollution
M.S COLLEGE OF ARTS,SCIENCE ,COMMERCE AND B.M.S Bioremediation
Presentation transcript:

Kaan Poyraz Civil Engineering – Environmental Engineering

Bioremediation Bioremediation can be defined as any process that uses microorganisms, fungi, green plants or their enzymes to return the natural environment altered by contaminants to its original condition.

Bioremediation Cleanup of oil spills by the addition of nitrate and/or sulfate fertilizers to facilitate the decomposition of crude oil by indigenous or exogenous bacteria. To attack specific soil contaminants, such as degradation of chlorinated hydrocarbons by bacteria.

Overview and applications Naturally occurring bioremediation and phytoremediation have been used for centuries (desalination of agricultural land by phytoextraction). Bioremediation technology using microorganisms was reportedly invented by George M. Robinson. He was the assistant county petroleum engineer for Santa Maria, California. During the 1960s, he spent his spare time experimenting with dirty jars and various mixes of microbes.

Overview and applications Bioremediation technologies can be generally classified as in situ or ex situ. In situ bioremediation involves treating the contaminated material at the site while ex situ involves the removal of the contaminated material to be treated elsewhere. Some examples of bioremediation technologies are bioventing, landfarming, bioreactor, composting, bioaugmentation, rhizofiltration, and biostimulation.

Overview and applications Naturally occurring bioremediation: natural attenuation or intrinsic bioremediation Bioremediation via the addition of fertilizers to increase the bioavailability within the medium: biostimulation Addition of matched microbe strains to the medium to enhance the resident microbe population's ability to break down contaminants: bioaugmentation

Overview and applications Heavy metals such as cadmium and lead are not readily absorbed or captured by organisms. The assimilation of metals such as mercury into the food chain may worsen matters. Phytoremediation is useful in these situations, because natural plants or transgenic plants are able to bioaccumulate these toxins in their above-ground parts, which are then harvested for removal.

Advantages the cost of the phytoremediation is lower than that of traditional processes both in situ and ex situ can be employed in areas that are inaccessible without excavation the plants can be easily monitored the possibility of the recovery and re-use of valuable metals (by companies specializing in “phyto mining”) it is potentially “the least harmful” method because it uses naturally occurring organisms and preserves the environment in a more natural state

References 1) 2) 1&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchSt rId= &_rerunOrigin=scholar.google&_acct=C &_version=1&_urlVe rsion=0&_userid=10&md5=8fded7c6e7043ef8d478fe757de76f02 3) Meagher, RB (2000). "Phytoremediation of toxic elemental and organic pollutants". Current Opinion in Plant Biology 3 (2): 153–162. doi: /S (99) PMID ) Diaz E (editor). (2008). Microbial Biodegradation: Genomics and Molecular Biology (1st ed.). Caister Academic Press. ISBN ) 6) Lovley, DR (2003). "Cleaning up with genomics: applying molecular biology to bioremediation". Nature Reviews. Microbiology. 1 (1): 35 – 44. doi: /nrmicro731. PMID ) Brim H, McFarlan SC, Fredrickson JK, Minton KW, Zhai M, Wackett LP, Daly MJ (2000). "Engineering Deinococcus radiodurans for metal remediation in radioactive mixed waste environments". Nature Biotechnology 18 (1): 85 – 90. doi: / PMID

Thank You for Your Attention