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1.
A fungal strain possibly capable of removing hexavalent chromium was to be isolated from industrial effluent from a leather factory located in the city of Guadalajara, state of Jalisco, Mexico. The strain was identified as Trichoderma inhamatum by the D1/D2 domain sequence of the 28S rDNA gene. Batch cultures of T. inhamatum in media containing initial Cr(VI) concentrations from 0.83 to 2.43 mM Cr(VI) were prepared. Experimental results suggest that the fungus is capable of transforming hexavalent chromium to trivalent chromium; a transformation of a highly toxic contaminant to a low toxic form. The specific and volumetric rates of Cr(VI) reduction by T. inhamatum cultures decreased as the initial Cr(VI) concentration increased. The fungus exhibited a remarkable capacity to tolerate and completely reduce Cr(VI) concentrations up to 2.43 mM. These results indicate that the T. inhamatum fungal strain may have potential applications in bioremediation of Cr(VI)-contaminated wastewaters.  相似文献   

2.
Streptomyces sp. MC1, previously isolated from sugar cane, has shown ability to reduce Cr(VI) in liquid minimal medium and soil samples. The objective of this work was to demonstrate the intracellular chromium accumulation by Streptomyces sp. MC1 under different culture conditions. This strain was able to accumulate up to 3.54 mg of Cr(III) per gram of wet biomass, reducing the 98% of Cr(VI) and removing 13.9% of chromium from the culture medium supernatants. Streptomyces sp. MC1 chromium bioaccumulation ability was corroborated by using Timm’s reagent technique, a low-cost method, which has been used by first time to detect chromium deposits in bacteria. The results of atomic absorption spectrometry, scanning electron microscopy, and energy dispersive X-ray analysis suggest that the mechanism of Cr(VI) resistance observed in Streptomyces sp. MC1 includes adsorption coupled with reduction to Cr(III), and finally, Cr(III) bioaccumulation. This mechanism have special relevance to remediation of Cr(VI) contaminated environments by Streptomyces sp. MC1.  相似文献   

3.
The short term acute toxicity of potassium chromate, potassium dichromate and chromium sulphate has been compared in a simple microbial bioassay. The test parameters were, decrease in viability, genotoxicity and metal uptake. The LC50 values of Cr(III), dichromate Cr(VI) and chromate Cr(VI) for Escherichia coli were 16, 10 and 1.2 μg mL?1, respectively. Among the test substances potassium chromate was most toxic and showed no bioaccumulation while potassium dichromate was less toxic but resulted in significant bioaccumulation. Chromium sulphate was least toxic. As evident from loss of plasmid, genotoxicity was exhibited only by Cr (VI).  相似文献   

4.
《Applied soil ecology》2007,35(2-3):125-139
The toxic effect of chromate on soil microbial communities is not well documented, although microorganisms control biogeochemical cycling, contribute to formation of soil structure, regulate the fate of organic matter applied to soil. In this study the effects of short- and middle-term chromate on the soil microbial community were investigated. The shifts in the size and in the diversity of culturable heterotrophic bacterial community, the resistance to Cr(VI) of heterotrophic bacteria, the presence of cyanobacteria, the activity of 19 enzymes, and the ATP content were monitored over time (120 days) in soil microcosms artificially contaminated with three concentrations of chromate (50, 250 and 1000 mg kg−1 soil). The chromate contamination affected the structure and the diversity of the soil bacterial community. Bacterial strains isolated from the microcosm contaminated with the highest concentration of chromate were identified by 16S rDNA gene sequencing. All isolates belonged to the genus Pseudomonas, were able to reduce Cr(VI), and showed a high resistance to chromate. To our knowledge, this is the first report that shows Pseudomonas strains having the capability to resist up to 40 mM of Cr(VI) on minimal medium. The cyanobacterial group was more sensitive to chromate contamination than culturable heterotrophic bacteria. No cyanobacterial growth was detected in enrichment cultures from the soil polluted with the highest chromate concentration. Some enzymes were inhibited by high concentrations of chromate, whereas others were stimulated. The ATP content in microcosms was strongly affected by chromate. We conclude that the soil microbial community responds to chromate pollution through changes in community structure, in metabolic activity, and in selection for Cr(VI)-resistance.  相似文献   

5.
Extensive use of chromium in industry has caused environmental contamination. Chromium-resistant bacteria are capable of reducing toxic Cr (VI) to less toxic Cr (III). Eight isolates, which can grow on LB agar containing 500 mg/L of Cr (VI), were isolated from soil samples of iron mineral area. The bacterial isolates were identified as Bacillus sp. by the 16S rRNA gene sequences. Phylogenetic tree analysis indicates the isolates can be divided into two groups. The bacterial isolates can be resistant to other heavy metals and reduce Cr (VI) at different levels. One bacterial isolate (MDS05), which can tolerate 2500 mg/L Cr (VI) and was able to reduce almost 100% of Cr (VI) at the concentration of 10 mg/L in 24 h, was selected to study the effects of some environmental factors such as pH, temperature, and time on Cr (VI) reduction and growth. The cell growth of MDS05 was affected by the presence of Cr (VI), especially at the concentration of 100 mg/L. It reduced more amount of Cr (VI) under a wide range of concentrations from 5 to 50 mg/L, and reduction was optimum at 37 °C and pH 8. MDS05 showed great promise for use in Cr (VI) detoxification under a wide range of environmental conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract

Chromium (Cr) appears in two stable forms in nature as Cr(III) and Cr(VI). Hexavalent chromium (CrO4 2‐; Cr2O7 2‐) is very toxic and carcinogenic, while inorganic Cr(III), however, is essential for mammals. Only two methods, atomic absorption and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission (ICP) spectrometry, provide information on the total amount of Cr in a test solution. This is the reason that several efforts have been made with regard to Cr speciation. Either an acidic or a basic activated aluminum oxide and a reversed phase C‐18 column or an ion exchanger column are used for the separation of chromium(III) from chromium(VI) in FIA and HPLC analyses. In our experiments, acidic‐activated aluminum oxide was used for separation. This alumina was placed into a silicon tube and connected to an ICP spectrometer between the nebulizer and peristaltic pump. The average grain size of the alumina was large enough that the solution could be pumped through the micro column. Acidic‐activated aluminum oxide in the 2.0 to 8.0 pH range adsorbs the chromate anion but not the Cr(III) cation. During this stage, the Cr(III) content of a sample is measurable. The adsorbed chromate can be eluted with a strong acid. The height or area of the elution peak can be used for the calibration of Cr(VI). Detection limits of 4 μg/kg and 0.5 μg/kg were obtained for Cr(III) and Cr(VI), respectively. The effects of sulphate and phosphate anions on the surface of the alumina on chromate adsorption were also evaluated. This method was used for the measurement of Cr(VI) concentration by 0.01M CaCl2 extraction of soil.  相似文献   

7.
Soluble chromate concentrations as high as 200 μg Cr L-1 have been reported in water samples from monitoringwells tapping alluvial deposits allegedly contaminated bylaboratory waste as well as control wells off site andupgradient (shallow aquifer) near Davis California, U.S.A. In this report we present evidence that these Cr(VI) levelscould have been generated by geogenic processes rather thanby anthropogenic inputs. We tested the hypothesis thatnative Cr(III) has been and can be oxidized to chromate bynative manganese oxides. Twenty-three drill core samples(all unsaturated) were retrieved from depths varying from1.5 to 22.5 m in 6 different wells. Visible nodules ofMnO2 were dispersed throughout many of the samples andcarbonates were also present. Sample pH values averagedabout 8.0 and organic C was mostly less than 1.0 g kg-1. Total Mn and Cr averaged 835 and 191 mg kg-1respectively. All samples had the capability to oxidizeadded Cr(III) to Cr(VI). To determine the inherent capabilityof the samples to produce Cr(VI) from native Cr(III), subsamples were extracted with 5 mM CaSO4 plus 5 mM MgSO4 until Cr(VI) was no longer detected. After freeze-drying, deionized-distilled water was added to theleached samples to approximately field capacity (0.03 MPa). Freeze drying did not generate Cr(VI). These samples wereincubated in polyethylene film bags at room temperature inthe dark. After 1 week incubation, water in the samples wasextracted by centrifugation and the extracts were analyzedfor Cr(VI). All of the samples generated Cr(VI), and theconcentrations in the extracts ranged from 20 to 100 μg Cr L-1. Total chromium, endemic chromium VI and chromium VI generated in leached samples were not statistically different between samples from onsite and control samples taken offsite and upgradient in respect to the shallowest aquifer.  相似文献   

8.
Bader  J. L.  Gonzalez  G.  Goodell  P. C.  Pillai  S. D.  Ali  A. S. 《Water, air, and soil pollution》1999,109(1-4):263-276
Chromium-containing industrial effluents are primarily responsible for environmental contamination by toxic and highly mobile, hexavalent chromium. The dilution plate-count method, using media amended with Cr(VI) at concentrations ranging from 0 to 1000 mg L-1, was used to compare the sizes of Cr(VI)-resistant bacterial populations from a soil contaminated with 25 100 mg kg-1 total Cr [12 400 mg kg-1 Cr(VI)] to those isolated from a slightly contaminated soil (99.6 mg kg-1 total Cr) and two other soils without any history of Cr contamination. Bacterial populations resistant to 500 mg L-1 Cr(VI) were isolated from all soils except the heavily contaminated soil. To determine whether Cr-resistant bacterial populations were indigenous to both the contaminated and the uncontaminated soils, enrichment cultures containing Cr(VI) at concentrations ranging from 0 to 1000 mg L-1 were employed. Bacterial populations, as high as 105 (colony forming units) CFU g-1 soil, tolerant of 500 mg L-1 Cr(VI) were isolated from all soils within 48 h of enrichment suggesting that the presence of aerobic Cr(VI)-resistant bacterial populations is unrelated to contamination levels or contamination history. However, identification of these resistant bacteria using fatty acid profiles was unsuccessful suggesting that these populations may have unique characteristics. Fungal colonies resistant to 1000 mg L-1 Cr(VI) were routinely isolated from both uncontaminated and contaminated soils. The results suggest that Cr-resistant microorganisms may be present in soils, even those with no history of Cr contamination.  相似文献   

9.
Solution pH is among the most important parameters that influence heavy metal biosorption. This work presents a kinetic study of the effects of pH on chromium biosorption onto Cupressus lusitanica Mill bark from aqueous Cr(VI) or Cr(III) solutions and proposes a mechanism of adsorption. At all assayed contact times, the optimum pH for chromium biosorption from the Cr(III) solution was 5.0; in contrast, optimum pH for chromium biosorption from the Cr(VI) solution varied depending on contact time. The kinetic models that satisfactorily described the chromium biosorption processes from the Cr(III) and Cr(VI) solutions were the Elovich and pseudo second-order models, respectively. Diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy studies suggest that phenolic compounds present on C. lusitanica Mill bark play an important role in chromium biosorption from the Cr(III) solution. On the other hand, chromium biosorption from the Cr(VI) solution involved carboxyl groups produced on the bark by redox reactions between oxygen-containing groups and Cr(VI), and these were in turn responsible for the biosorption of Cr(III) produced by Cr(VI) reduction.  相似文献   

10.
Chrome electroplating wastes were collected from two industrial sites and analyzed for color, turbidity, pH, alkalinity, sulfate, chloride, N-ammonia, N-nitrate, N-nitrite, acid hydrolyzable P, dissolved oxygen, biochemical oxygen demand, chemical oxygen demand, chromate and chromium(VI). The effect of these wastes on saprophytic and nitrifying bacteria was studied with varying concentrations of the waste using sucrose substrate as a source of C chain for microorganisms. The use of clay sand mixtures as adsorbents for chromate and chromium(VI) was investigated. Mixtures high in clay content were found to be suitable media for the removal of Cr from the wastes. The clay used was characterized by determination of the following parameters: pH, electrical conductivity, water soluble salts, osmotic pressure, cation exchange capacity, CaCO3 and organic matter.  相似文献   

11.
Disposal of chromium(Cr) hexavalent form,Cr(VI),in soils as additions in organic fertilizers,liming materials or plant nutrient sources can be dangerous since Cr(VI) can be highly toxic to plants,animals,and humans.In order to explore soil conditions that lead to Cr(VI) generation,this study were performed using a Paleudult(Dystic Nitosol) from a region that has a high concentration of tannery operations in the Rio Grande do Sul State,southern Brazil.Three laboratory incubation experiments were carried out to examine the influences of soil moisture content and concentration of cobalt and organic matter additions on soil Cr(VI) formation and release and manganese(Mn) oxide reduction with a salt of chromium chloride(CrCl 3) and tannery sludge as inorganic and organic sources of Cr(III),respectively.The amount of Cr(III) oxidation depended on the concentration of easily reducible Mn oxides and the oxidation was more intense at the soil water contents in which Mn(III/IV) oxides were more stable.Soluble organic compounds in soil decreased Cr(VI) formation due to Cr(III) complexation.This mechanism also resulted in the decrease in the oxidation of Cr(III) due to the tannery sludge additions.Chromium(III) oxidation to Cr(VI) at the solid/solution interface involved the following mechanisms:the formation of a precursor complex on manganese(Mn) oxide surfaces,followed by electron transfer from Cr(III) to Mn(III or IV),the formation of a successor complex with Mn(II) and Cr(VI),and the breakdown of the successor complex and release of Mn(II) and Cr(VI) into the soil solution.  相似文献   

12.
The anion exchange behaviour of hydrous titanium oxide(HTO) has been exploited for the management of industrialwaste effluents contaminated with chromium(VI). Theadsorption of chromium(VI) by HTO (74.0–140.0 micron) in thepH range 0.5–8.0 has been studied. It is found that theadsorption of chromium(VI) by HTO is at a maximum in the pHrange 1.5–2.0. The interference of diverse foreign ionssuch as nitrate, chloride, sulfate, phosphate, calcium,magnesium, nickel, iron(III), barium etc. on the adsorptionof chromium(VI) by HTO at optimum pH has been investigatedby a batch-operation technique. Break-through capacity,adsorption and elution of chromium(VI) using HTO have beenstudied. It is found that HTO could be reused as anadsorbent for chromium(VI). Finally, chromium(VI) wasrecovered as insoluble chromate compound from waste effluentof Hindustan Motor Limited (HML) of Hooghly, West Bengal, India.  相似文献   

13.
The sorption of chromium (Cr) species to soil has become the focus of research as it dictates the bioavailability and also the magnitude of toxicity of Cr. The sorption of two environmentally important Cr species [Cr(III) and Cr(VI)] was examined using batch sorption, and the data were fitted to Langmuir and Freundlich adsorption isotherms. The effects of soil properties such as pH, CEC, organic matter (OM), clay, water-extractable SO4 2– and PO4 3–, surface charge, and different iron (Fe) fractions of 12 different Australian representative soils on the sorption, and mobility of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) were examined. The amount of sorption as shown by K f was higher for Cr(III) than Cr(VI) in all tested soils. Further, the amount of Cr(III) sorbed increased with an increase in pH, CEC, clay, and OM of soils. Conversely, the chemical properties of soil such as positive charge and Fe (crystalline) had a noticeable influence on the sorption of Cr(VI). Desorption of Cr(VI) occurred rapidly and was greater than desorption of Cr(III) in soils. The mobility of Cr species as estimated by the retardation factor was higher for Cr(VI) than for Cr(III) in all tested soils. These results concurred with the results from leaching experiments which showed higher leaching of Cr(VI) than Cr(III) in both acidic and alkaline soils indicating the higher mobility of Cr(VI) in a wide range of soils. This study demonstrated that Cr(VI) is more mobile and will be bioavailable in soils regardless of soil properties and if not remediated may eventually pose a severe threat to biota.  相似文献   

14.
A new hybrid process has been proposed and evaluated the feasibility for complete removal of chromate and selenate at high level. The process consists of a H2-based membrane biofilm reactor (MBfR) and reverse osmosis (RO)/nanofiltration (NF) stages. The essential feature of the process is the recycling of the RO and NF concentrate into the membrane biofilm reactor. First, two different H2-based denitrifying MBfR initially reduced selenate (Se (VI)) or chromate (Cr (III)) stably to Se° or Cr (III) to limited levels (approximately 70–85% removal for selenate and approximately 40–65% removal for chromate). In order to achieve more stable and lower levels, two different membrane (NF and RO) filtration technologies as sequential process were combined. Two wastewaters produced from two MBfRs having similar amounts of target toxic ions (C o?=?366 μg-Cr L?1 and C o?=?326 μg-Se L?1), pH, and conductivity were tested to determine the solute rejection and the membrane flux for one RO and one NF membranes at varying recovery conditions (10–90%). The results show that the rejection of solutes decreases with increasing the recovery due to the increase in osmotic pressure. The rejections by the RO membrane were >99–98% for chromate and 99–94% for selenate, while slightly lower rejections (<20%) were observed for the NF membrane at the recovery conditions.  相似文献   

15.
The influence of culture medium composition on chromium(VI) quantification according to diphenylcarbazide (DPC) colorimetric determination was evaluated. Considering the eventual biospeciation of Cr(VI) as a mechanism of microbial bioremediation, the possibility to quantify Cr(III) in culture medium was also explored. Yeast nitrogen base (YNB) was identified as the least interferent culture medium for Cr(VI) quantification by DPC and it was applied to compare different strategies for Cr(III) oxidation. The most appropriate oxidation protocol consisted in the reaction with 80 mM KIO4 at room temperature for 30 min prior to DPC. Parameters like basal culture medium (vitamins + salts + oligoelements), C and N source were systematically evaluated, either independently or in combination. Results demonstrated that C source was the most interferent culture medium component, being the use of sucrose preferable to glucose. A medium arbitrarily named as YNB′ (YNB without amino acids and ammonium sulfate plus 50 g L?1 sucrose and 0.6 g L?1 (NH4)2SO4) was defined for Cr(VI)-amended fungal cultures. Kinetics of growth, Cr(VI) removal, and nutrient consumption for isolates A. pullulans VR-8, filamentous fungus PMF-1, and Lecythophora sp. NGV-1 were obtained. The order of Cr(VI) removal efficiency was as follows: A. pullulans VR-8 > Lecythophora sp. NGV-1 > filamentous fungus PMF-1, and a similar trend was observed for biomass yield and nutrients consumption. Studies on biospeciation by means of the selected Cr(III) oxidation protocol were unsuccessful, leading to Cr(VI) values much lower than expected. It revealed that this kind of protocols should be cautiously evaluated when studying microbial Cr(VI) bioremediation.  相似文献   

16.
Soil contaminated by chromium (Cr) is a major concern for sustainable agriculture. Considering this as a basis, the present study was designed to isolate Cr(VI)-reducing and plant growth-promoting bacterial strain from contaminated sampling sources. In this study, Rhizobium strain ND2 was isolated from the root nodules of Phaseolus vulgaris grown in leather industrial effluent contaminated soil. The strain ND2 exhibited strong resistance to different heavy metals and reduced 30 and 50 µg ml?1 concentrations of Cr(VI) completely after 80 and 120 h of incubation, respectively, as well as chromium adsorption and immobilization were confirmed by scanning electron microscopic equipped with energy X-ray spectroscopy. In addition, the strain produced 21.73 and 36.86 µg ml?1 of indole-3-acetic acid at 50 and 100 µg ml?1 of L-tryptophan supplimentations, respectively. Strain ND2 positively affected the exo-polysaccharide, ammonia, protease and catalase production and stimulated root length of various test crops under Cr(VI) stress. Moreover, Rhizobium strain ND2 has the potential to colonize the diverse agricultural crops. Thus, the present findings strongly suggested that the multipotential properties of ND2 could be exploited for bioremediation of contaminated sites with Cr(VI) as well as potential bio fertilizer for enhancing the agricultural productivity.  相似文献   

17.
Continual discharge of textile wastewaters loaded with a variety of synthetic dyes and metals is considered as a huge threat to surrounding ecosystems. In order to treat these undesirable pollutants, microbial bioremediation is considered as an efficient and economical technique. This study was conducted to evaluate the use of bacterial strains for simultaneous removal of azo dyes and hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)]. Fifty-eight bacterial strains were isolated from Paharang drain wastewater and tested for their potential to decolorize reactive red-120 (RR-120) in the presence of 25 mg L?1 of Cr(VI). Among the tested isolates, FA10 decolorized the RR-120 most efficiently and was identified as Acinetobacter junii strain FA10. Based on quadratic polynomial equation and response surfaces given by the response surface methodology (RSM), Cr concentration and pH were found to be the main factors governing the RR-120 decolorization by FA10. The strain FA10 also exhibited a substantial salt resistance since it showed a considerable decolorization of RR-120 even in the presence of 150 g L?1 of NaCl. Moreover, the strain FA10 also showed the potential to simultaneously remove the Cr(VI) and the selected azo dyes in the same medium. More than 80 % of the initially added Cr(VI) was removed over 72 h of incubation along with the appreciable decolorization efficiency. The strain FA10 also exhibited good tolerance to considerable levels of different heavy metals. The findings of this study suggest that the strain FA10 might serve as an efficient bioresource to develop the biotechnological approaches for simultaneous removal of different azo dyes and heavy metals including Cr(VI).  相似文献   

18.
Chromium occurs naturally at trace levels in most soils and water, but disposal of industrial waste and sewage sludge containing chromium compounds has created a number of contaminated sites, which could pose a major environmental threat. This study was conducted to enumerate and isolate chromium-resistant microorganisms from sediments of evaporation ponds of a metal processing plant and determine their tolerance to other metals, metalloids and antibiotics. Enumeration of the microbiota of Cr-contaminated sediments and a clean background sample was conducted by means of the dilution-plate count method using media spiked with Cr(VI) at concentrations ranging from 10 to 1000 mg L?1. Twenty Cr(VI) tolerant bacterial isolates were selected and their resistance to other metals and metalloids, and to antibiotics was assessed using a plate diffusion technique. The number of colony-forming units (cfu) of the contaminated sediments declined with increasing concentrations from 10 to 100 mg L?1 Cr(VI), and more severely from 100 to 1000 mg L?1 Cr(VI). The background sample behaved similarly to 100 mg L?1 Cr(VI), but the cfu declined more rapidly thereafter, and no cfu were observed at 1000 mg L?1 Cr(VI). Metals and metalloids that inhibited growth (from the most to least inhibitory) were: Hg > Cd > Ag > Mo = As(III) at 50 μg mL?1. All 20 isolates were resistant to Co, Cu, Fe, Ni, Se(IV), Se(VI), Zn, Sn, As(V), Te and Sb at 50 μg mL?1 and Pb at 100 μg mL?1. Eighty-five percent of the isolates had multiple antibiotic resistance. In general, the more metal-tolerant bacteria were among the more resistant to antibiotics. It appears that the Cr-contaminated sediments may have enriched for bacterial strains with increased Cr(VI) tolerance.  相似文献   

19.

Purpose

Wastes of unknown composition derived from the production of trivalent chromium (Cr(III)) salts used as tanning agents are deposited in the area of Kanpur, India. The questions of whether these samples are chromite ore processing residue (COPR) and whether Cr occurs in its toxic hexavalent form (Cr(VI)) arise.

Materials and methods

Twenty-one samples from two disposal sites and surrounding soils were analyzed, specifically examining their elemental and mineralogical composition. Additionally, aqueous eluates with different liquid-to-solid ratios were performed and analyzed for Cr(VI).

Results and discussion

The samples were classified in accordance to the sum of silicon and aluminum and the sum of calcium and Cr contents: uncontaminated, moderately contaminated, and highly contaminated material. Highly contaminated material exhibited extremely alkaline pH values up to 12.5 and total Cr contents ranging from 65.7 to 110 g/kg, whereas uncontaminated material had comparatively moderate pH values and Cr contents <1 g/kg. In total, seven crystalline phases commonly found in COPR were identified in the contaminated samples, of which five phases (brownmillerite, hydrocalumite, hydrogarnet, magnesiochromite, and periclase) are known to be able to accommodate Cr whereas hydrogarnet and hydrocalumite are the main host phases for Cr(VI). Batch tests showed that dissolution controlled the Cr(VI) concentrations in the eluates.

Conclusions

Six samples were clearly identified as highly Cr-contaminated COPR. Leaching of Cr(VI) and resulting contamination of soils and water bodies is a key environmental risk arising from these COPR sites especially during the monsoon season. This situation is of particular concern as the local population use the highly Cr(VI)-contaminated water not only for the needs of livestock and irrigation but also as drinking water due to the absence of alternative water resources.  相似文献   

20.
Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) and dyes are of particular environmental concern and need to be removed from water urgently due to their high toxicity. Herein, we explored the possibility of electron transferring from dye Orange II (OII) to Cr(VI) under UV and simulated solar light irradiation, expecting to simultaneously decolorize dyes and reduce Cr(VI). Experimental results show that light irradiation can partially decolorize OII but has no ability to reduce Cr(VI) in solution only with OII or Cr(VI). However, both dyes and Cr(VI) can effectively and simultaneously be decolorized and reduced in the solution containing both OII and Cr(VI) under light irradiation, and a low pH level and high OII/Cr(VI) concentration ratio significantly favor the co-removal. Additionally, insoluble organo–Cr(III) complexes identified by FTIR and XPS characterization were generated during the reaction. These complexes are beneficial to the removal of chromium and total organic carbon from water. The possible degradation pathway of OII is further proposed based on the detection of degraded products by GC-MS analysis. The results of this work offer an approach for simultaneously removing multiple contaminants.  相似文献   

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