ENCAPSULATED PSEUDOMONAS PUTIDA FOR PHENOL BIODEGRADATION USING A STRUCTURAL MEMBRANE CAPSULE

Eyal Kurzbaum 1 Yasmin Raizner 1 Ran Y. Suckeveriene 2 Lilach Iasur Kruh 3 Ofir Menashe 2
1Ecology and Environment, Shamir Research Institute, Qatzrin
2Water Industries Engineering Department, Kinneret College on the Sea of Galilee, Qatzrin
3Department of Biotechnology Engineering, ORT Braude College, Karmiel

Phenols are toxic byproducts from a wide range of industry sectors. If not treated, they form effluents that are very hazardous to the environment. This study presents the use of a Pseudomonas putida F1 culture encapsulated within a confined environment particle as an efficient technique for phenol biodegradation. The innovative encapsulation technique method, named the "Small Bioreactor Platform" (SBP) technology, enables the use of a microfiltration membrane constructed as a physical barrier for creating a confined environment for the encapsulated culture. The phenol biodegradation rate of the encapsulated culture was compared to its suspended state in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the encapsulation technique for phenol biodegradation. A maximal phenol biodegradation rate (q) of 2.12 h-1 was exhibited by encapsulated P. putida at an initial phenol concentration of 100 mg/L. The biodegradation rate decreased significantly at lower and higher initial phenol concentrations of 50 and up to 3000 mg/L, reaching a rate of 0.1018 h-1. The results also indicate similar and up to double the degradation rate between the two bacterial states (encapsulated vs. suspended). High resolution scanning electron microscopy images of the SBP capsule`s membrane morphology demonstrated a highly porous microfiltration membrane that enables effcient trafficking of dissolved molecules across the membrane. These results, together with the long-term activity of the SBP capsules and verification that the culture remains pure after 60 days, provide evidence for a succsesful application of this new encapsulation technique for bioaugmentation of selected microbial cultures in water treatment processes.

Eyal Kurzbaum
Eyal Kurzbaum
Shamir Research Institute, University of Haifa








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