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Abstract

In this study, Bacillus cereus isolate from tannery effluent was employed for orange II dye decolorization in simulated minimal salt broth and textile effluent. Most of the physicochemical parameters of textile effluent were above the permissible limits. The strain was highly tolerant to dye up to 500 mg l^sup -1^. Increasing dye concentration exerted inhibitory effect on the bacterial growth and decolorization. The maximum decolorization of initial 100 mg dye l^sup -1^ was achieved at optimum pH 8.0 and 33 °C under static culture conditions during 96-h incubation. Supplementation with optimized glucose (0.4 %, w/v) and ammonium sulfate (0.1 %, w/v) with 3.0 % B. cereus inoculum further enhanced dye decolorization to highest 68.5 % within 96-h incubation. A direct correlation was evident between bacterial growth and dye decolorization. Under above optimized conditions, 24.3 % decolorization of unsterilized real textile effluent by native microflora was achieved. The effluent decolorization enhanced substantially to 37.1 % with B. cereus augmentation and to 40.5 % when supplemented with glucose and ammonium sulfate without augmentation. The maximum decolorization of 52.5 % occurred when textile effluent was supplemented with optimized exogenous carbon and nitrogen sources along with B. cereus augmentation. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry identified sulfanilic acid as orange II degradation product. Fourier transform infra red spectroscopy of metabolic products indicated the presence of amino and hydroxyl functional groups. This strain may be suitably employed for in situ decolorization of textile industrial effluent under broad environmental conditions.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Process parameters for decolorization and biodegradation of orange II (Acid Orange 7) in dye-simulated minimal salt medium and subsequent textile effluent treatment by Bacillus cereus (MTCC 9777) RMLAU1
Author
Garg, Satyendra Kumar; Tripathi, Manikant
Pages
8909-23
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Nov 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0167-6369
e-ISSN
1573-2959
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1437734175
Copyright
Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013