Title | Remediation and recovery of uranium from contaminated subsurface environments with electrodes. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2005 |
Authors | Gregory KB, Lovley DR |
Journal | Environ Sci Technol |
Volume | 39 |
Issue | 22 |
Pagination | 8943-7 |
Date Published | 2005 Nov 15 |
ISSN | 0013-936X |
Keywords | Biodegradation, Environmental, Electrodes, Geobacter, Graphite, Soil Pollutants, Uranium, Water Pollutants, Chemical |
Abstract | Previous studies have demonstrated that Geobacter species can effectively remove uranium from contaminated groundwater by reducing soluble U(VI) to the relatively insoluble U(IV) with organic compounds serving as the electron donor. Studies were conducted to determine whether electrodes might serve as an alternative electron donor for U(VI) reduction by a pure culture of Geobacter sulfurreducens and microorganisms in uranium-contaminated sediments. Electrodes poised at -500 mV (vs a Ag/AgCl reference) rapidly removed U(VI) from solution in the absence of cells. However, when the poise at the electrode was removed, all of the U(VI) returned to solution, demonstrating that the electrode did not reduce U(VI). If G. sulfurreducens was present on the electrode, U(VI) did not return to solution until the electrode was exposed to dissolved oxygen. This suggeststhat G. sulfurreducens on the electrode reduced U(VI) to U(IV) which was stably precipitated until reoxidized in the presence of oxygen. When an electrode was placed in uranium-contaminated subsurface sediments, U(VI) was removed and recovered from groundwater using poised electrodes. Electrodes emplaced in flow-through columns of uranium-contaminated sediments readily removed U(VI) from the groundwater, and 87% of the uranium that had been removed was recovered from the electrode surface after the electrode was pulled from the sediments. These results suggest that microorganisms can use electrons derived from electrodes to reduce U(VI) and that it may be possible to remove and recover uranium from contaminated groundwater with poised electrodes. |
Alternate Journal | Environ. Sci. Technol. |
PubMed ID | 16323798 |
Department of Microbiology