skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: The efficacy of an oxidation pond in mineralizing some industrial waste products with special reference to fluorene degradation: A case study

Journal Article · · Waste Management

The efficacy of the oxidation pond on the outskirts of the 10th of Ramadan, the main industrial city in Egypt, was examined. Samples of wastewater collected from the inlet and the outlet were screened for some priority pollutants. Acenaphethene and fluorene were the most frequently detected polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, while dimethyl phthalate was the most frequently detected phthalate ester. The spectrum of pollutants, their concentrations and frequencies were similar in the inlet and the outlet, indicating an inferior mineralization capability of the pond. Several degradative bacterial strains were isolated from the pond and grown on M56 minimal media supplemented with different pollutants as the carbon source. The efficacy of pure and mixed cultures to break down fluorene, the most frequently detected pollutant was examined. Fluorene degradation was fast in the first 10 days, the followed by a slow phase. Mixed culture had a higher rate of fluorene degradation in comparison to pure cultures. High performance liquid chromatography analysis of fluorene degradation showed three degradative metabolites. But GC/MS analysis detected one compound, identified as acetamide. The present work has indicated the poor efficacy of the pond. Lack of primary treatment of industrial effluent at factory level, coupled with shock loads of toxicants that may damage the microorganisms and their degradative capabilities are presumably main factors behind such inferior performance. Moreover, the type of pollutants discharged into the pond tend to fluctuate and change depending on the rate from the factories discharge and work shifts. Such irregular feeding of persistent pollutants may have led to a wash out of specialized strains of bacteria capable to degrade such persistent pollutants.

Research Organization:
Suez Canal Univ., Ismailia (EG)
OSTI ID:
20018997
Journal Information:
Waste Management, Vol. 19, Issue 7-8; Other Information: PBD: 1999; ISSN 0956-053X
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

Transformation of substituted fluorenes and fluorene analogs by pseudomonas sp. strain F274
Journal Article · Fri Sep 01 00:00:00 EDT 1995 · Applied and Environmental Microbiology · OSTI ID:20018997

Actions of a versatile fluorene-degrading bacterial isolate on polycyclic aromatic compounds
Journal Article · Sun Oct 01 00:00:00 EDT 1995 · Applied and Environmental Microbiology · OSTI ID:20018997

Distribution and rate of disappearance of fluorene in pond ecosystems
Journal Article · Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 EST 1984 · Chemosphere; (United States) · OSTI ID:20018997