INVESTIGADORES
CURUTCHET Gustavo Andres
artículos
Título:
Debaryomyces hansenii F39A as biosorbent for textile dye removal
Autor/es:
RUSCASSO, FLORENCIA; BEZUS, BRENDA; GARMENDIA, GABRIELA; VERO, SILVANA; CURUTCHET, GUSTAVO; CAVELLO, IVANA; CAVALITTO, SEBASTIÁN
Revista:
REVISTA ARGENTINA DE MICROBIOLOGíA
Editorial:
ASOCIACION ARGENTINA MICROBIOLOGIA
Referencias:
Lugar: Buenos Aires; Año: 2021 vol. 53 p. 263 - 275
ISSN:
0325-7541
Resumen:
Many industries, such as textile, paper and plastics, consume substantial volumes of water and use dyes in order to color their products. As a result, they generate a considerable amount of colored wastewater. Dyes are recalcitrant organic molecules, resistant to aerobic degradation, and are stable to light, heat and oxidizing agents. Yeasts have been successfully employed in textile dye treatment through biosorption mechanisms.The main objective of this research was to examine the biosorptive capacity of the Antarctic yeast Debaryomyces hansenii F39A biomass for a series of commercially available dyes. Reactive Blue 19 and Reactive Red 141 were chosen due they represent different dyes groupings including double azo class, anthraquinone and reactive class. Some variables, including pH, dye concentration, amount of adsorbent and contact time were studied. The equilibrium sorption capacity of the biomass increased with increasing initial dye concentration up to 350 mg l-1. Experimental isotherms fit the Langmuir model and the maximum uptake capacity (qmax) for the selected dyes was in the range of 106-120 mg g-1 biomass. At initial dye concentration of 100 mg l-1, 2 g l-1 biomass loading and 20 ± 1ºC, D. hansenii F39A adsorbed around of 90 % of Reactive Red 141 and 50 % of Reactive Blue 19 at pH 6.0. When biomass loading was increased (6 g l-1), the uptake reached up to 90 % for Reactive Blue 19. Dye uptake process followed the pseudo-second-order kinetics for each dye-system studied.