Abstract

The present work is the first to study co-biosorption of Pb(II) and Sb(III) by a novel bacterium and its application strategy. The biosorption characteristics of Pb(II) and Sb(III) ions from aqueous solution using B. subtilis were investigated. Optimum pH, biomass dosage, contact time and temperature were determined to be 5.00, 6.00 mg/L, 45 min and 35 °C, respectively. Langmuir, Freundlich, Temkin and Dubinin-Radushkevich (D-R) models were applied to describe the biosorption isotherm of the metal ions by B. subtilis. Results showed that Langmuir model fitted the equilibrium data of Pb(II) better than others, while biosorption of Sb(III) obeyed the Freundlich model well. The biosorption capacity of B. subtilis biomass for Pb(II) and Sb(III) ions was found to be 17.34 ± 0.14 and 2.32 ± 0.30 mg/g, respectively. Kinetic data showed the biosorption process of Pb(II) and Sb(III) ions both followed the pseudo-second-order kinetic model, with R2 ranging from 0.974 to 0.999 for Pb(II) and from 0.967 to 0.979 for Sb(III). The calculated thermodynamic parameters, negative ∆G and positive ∆H and ∆S values, indicated the biosorption of Pb(II) and Sb(III) ions onto B. subtilis biomass in water was feasible, endothermic, and spontaneous. Bacterial bioleaching experiment revealed B. subtilis can increase the mobility of Pb(II) and Sb(III) in polluted soil when pH was close to 6 at low temperature. Consequently, B. subtilis, as a cheap and original bacterial material, could be a promising biomass to remove Pb or isolate Sb from industrial wastewater and to assist phytoremediation of Pb and Sb from weak acid or near neutral pH polluted soils at low temperature.

Highlights

  • Toxic heavy metal ions have a broad range of sources, especially in water resources [1]

  • The effect of pH on the biosorption of Pb(II) and Sb(III) ions on B. subtilis biomass was studied by changing pH values ranging from 2.00 to 6.00 (Figure 1a)

  • This study is the first to investigate the co-biosorption from aqueous solution of Pb(II) and Sb(III)

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Summary

Introduction

Toxic heavy metal ions have a broad range of sources, especially in water resources [1]. Municipal wastes, mining and smelting of metalliferous ores, fertilizers, burning of fossil fuels, agriculture runoff and domestic effluent are the main sources of heavy metal contamination, which is difficult to remove and has detrimental effects on ecological systems and human health [2,3]. Among the various heavy metal ions presenting in wastewater, Pb(II) is one of the most prevalent. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 702; doi:10.3390/ijerph15040702 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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