Kind: captions Language: en great okay all right um good morning everybody um i'm gonna today continue with the bioremediation lecture uh last week we talked about you know biodegradation processes and bioremediation um today i'm going to talk about some case studies um i will rehash review a little bit about basic bioremediation and then we're going to talk about few case studies and then the last two case studies i personally involved in my research i'm going to discuss that today okay so just last week we defined bioremediation is use of biological organisms or their product to enhance environmental cleanup but specifically what we are most of the time using is subsurface microorganisms microorganism in the soil and below soil to reduce the hazardous nature of chemicals convert them into harmless by-products okay so you want to make sure you degrade the chemical ideally you want to mineralize the chemical convert them into in organic constituent in some cases we biotransform because it makes it less harmful than the parent compound so we also talked about natural attenuation and enhanced bioremediation by augmentation briefly last week so again the key point here you need to have the bioremediation triangle you need to make sure you bring all these three elements together pollutants organisms and the environment whether it is soil water here um you bring them all together that's the engineering challenge in real cleanup process um so stages of biodegradation is you know first of all you need to find out whether there is microorganisms in in the site that you want to clean up so you take some sample take with the lab isolate and uh look for the organisms identify the micro microbial isolate and working technical difficulties yeah and then after my optimization of degradation condition um you need to determine the efficiency of your microbial consortium and and then you can identify the whole metabolic pathway then you want to make sure that you're not activating um instead of degrading the compound and if you want to do some enzyme study you can do enzyme study and then you can do you know more detailed pathway that's more basic aspect of it just to know what is going on in the site okay so natural attenuation is not very commonly used because not fast enough is not complete enough um not frequently occurring um in in most of the site cases so the current trend in cleanup process is to stimulate the organisms inside so most of the time it's a biostimulation process aiding um adding electron donor are some limiting factors like nitrogen and phosphorus in some cases bioaugmentation is necessary because the organism is not there okay so let's talk about uh one of the uh processes now coming up is phytoremediation and phytoremediation is again everybody knows it is a use of the plant for accumulation or removal or conversion of pollutants so phenomenation broadly are using plants but there are a lot of processes going on you're stabilizing the chemical that is called phytostabilization you're water volatilizing the compound from below ground through a trans evaporation process through the plant it goes up in the atmosphere that is a phyto volatilization and then you have phytostimulation you're providing the rhizospheric soil microorganism interact with the chemical and you stimulate activity and then phytotransformation plant enzyme itself can transform some of the chemicals so that is vital transformation and then the last one is the one that commonly used called phytoextraction where the plant mobilizes the chemical into the plant biomass and then you harvest the plant and then you incinerate the plant to get another chemical so there are so many processes going on in fight remediation this next picture you can see um let me see you can see the plant uh showing all this phyto degradation right happening right on the plant phyto volatilization chemical go through the plant and then you have stabilization and extraction stimulation going on so approximately there are 400 plant species that have been classified as hyper accumulators or heavy metals so most of the time phytoelamination is used to clean up heavy metals um so it is it it takes up the heavy metals and you can harvest it and um and sometimes you convert the heavy metal from insoluble soluble pump to insoluble form and you can precipitate it so so a lot of plants have been used some of them are sunflower grasses hemp alfalfa tobacco plant then in aquatic system water hyacinth is commonly used in phytoremediation process and again the root exudates of the plants play an important role because it stimulates microbial activity in rhizospheric soil and so it can activate some combination of phytoremediation and bioremediation together in the in the root zone of the plant okay and then genetic engineering people are using nowadays in using greenhouse phytoremediation where they put plant and they put bacterial gene in plants and then they grow the plants to get rid of the chemicals so some of them been very successful but again it's very controlled condition it's not very broadly used we're using genetic engineering exactly like in agriculture now we produce bt like bt carbon same um process applied for cleanup so biodimensional metal in the most of the time we use phytoremediation for metal removal heavy metal removal okay so we can immobilize the metal we can bio accumulate some metal using polysaccharides and lipoproteins we can precipitate the metal by converting the metal um from you know insoluble to soluble form and then we can solubilize the metal using cedarophobes and organic acid and various chemicals produced by plants so contaminants that are aminable to bioremediations here's a list and readily degradable compound are there the gasoline component fuel oil we have ketone alcohol aromatic compound then and then two aromatic ring structure compound like naphthalene and some more degradable are creosote and coal tars and pentachlorophenol a lot of phenolic compounds and the compounds that are difficult to degrade are chlorinated solvents like tce carbon tetrachloride some herbicides and pesticides a very very recalcitrant compound that's going to persist in the environment for a long time our dioxins and pcbs so i talked about the plants uh microorganism have they produced the pseudo-4 molecule to solubilize so here is some of the example cedar falls most of them are produced by pseudomonas and pseudomonas tucciara is commonly used in you know solubilizing metal using cedar force and also the bacteria produce biosurfactants the biosurfactants are compound that has both features hydrophobic and hydrophilic which is non-polar and polar region in the same molecule that we call that antipathic molecule so biosurfactants are produced by bacteria cyanobacteria fungi and yeast and some other classes of biosurfactants are glycolipids lipoprotein phospholipid glycoprotein polymeric biosurfactants so these are widely used for compounds that are not soluble the compounds that are called dinapple dense non aqueous face liquid like tce um to make it more soluble and bioavailable for bacterial degradation i have a problem today all right um so the role of biosurfactan is again to increase the bioavailability of the compound that are hydrophobic and also nutrient storage of molecules um and save microbial cells from toxic substances it protects the microbes and an efflux of harmful compound um the harmful compound can be you know excreted out quickly by the bacteria so the bacteria will survive in the presence of toxic nature of the chemical and also another features of by surfactant is it's extracellular and intracellular interaction it helps in quantum sensing and in biofilms of bacteria so those are some of the benefits of biosurfactant to the microbes so um so we take advantage of this biosurfactant because it's a chemical that are pseudo solubilized by the biosurfactant so it also reduces the absorption of non-polar pollutant to the surface of soil particles so basically it increases the bioavailability for degradation process so again um quickly go through a couple of this um broad technique institute exo2 method um into two is without excavation of the site actually do we dig up the site and you know engineer the process i need to make sure that you optimize the condition most of the time it's aeration sometimes mostly oxygen limiting and then you need to provide right ph um moisture condition and nitrogen phosphorus limitation that's that's nutrient addition and sometimes you have to add surfactants to make it bioavailable okay so just again to to revisit from some other process um bioscience reactor can be used this is really fast um process so you can clean up really quickly but it's going to cost you a lot of money um biopile is another process you can put them in big pile and create a optimum condition for microbes um and then we can use um land farming uh commonly used landfall if the compound is leachable you have to put a liner plastic liner and then you create this landfarming condition for cleanup if the compound is not you know leeching it's going to stay um because of the soil condition you don't have to dig up and make a clay lay um prevent put up put a leaching collecting system but you don't have to do that just you can go and do the land farming without disturbing too much um we not only use bioremediation for in soil and water but you can also use for cleaning up the gaseous chemicals using bioscrubber bio trickling filters and slow sand or carbon filters so if there is some gaseous form of chemicals in subsurface condition you can bring that up and put them in scrubber and and bacteria will use those volatile compound as carbon so so here's some of the example of bioscrubber filters is basically um using biological reactor instead of putting influence as a wastewater you're putting influence as inlet gas and that inlet gas is could be all those volatile compound trapped in your soil so you kind of collect them and put them in this bile scrubber or you can use low sand carbon filters and these are slush and carbon filters you can have bacteria from a layer biofilm layer when the chemical go through this layer and they basically use them as carbon source the layer contains heterogeneous population of variety of organisms including bacteria fungi rhodifier and protozoa okay so let's look at what kind of chemicals mostly in soil and subsurface contaminant most of the time it's um oil related compound like b tax benzene tolerant ethyl benzene xylene we have thyrin and other polynucleomatics then we have chlorinated compound like solvents like tce and carbon tetrachloride and then herbicide and pesticide and then we have explosive chemical also so here is a picture to show the various sources where they are coming from i can come from um storage tank underground storage tank can be leaking from a septic tank infiltration gallery landfill leachate and there are various sources that you can get this pollution industrial source and and landfills and burial areas and dump sites okay so the current issues i said with gasoline use is it's a widespread contamination this is one of the major problem in us there are more than one million sites that need to be cleaned up and it's a major threat to drinking water um resource because it's going into subsurface and contaminate your drinking water source um like some other components of the fuels are carcinogenic you know if you cause cancer and this problem is not anymore but we still have pollution before we added ethanol to gasoline we in us we added this mtbe which is which is called methyl tertial detail ether which is which is the oxygenated fuel oxygenator to to burn the fuel better and have um your tailpipe emission will be less pollution but now we have this problem because of the gasoline with mtb also in the ground water but currently we come completely stopped mtv we now use ethanol 10 ethanol in the gasoline so that's a typical fuel spill most of the time from underground um storage tank from gas stations all right so gas stations are old more than 50 to 100 years old and they they're leaking into the ground water and this most of the lighter fragment of the gasoline float i call ellen apple light non-aqueous face liquid and then it forms this plume and it's gonna spread in the groundwater so that's a typical contaminated site look like um the second compound that is another problem is chlorinated solvent these are the uh the degreasing agent um mostly it's tce trichloroethylene this is just the opposite this is a d napple because this compound is denser than water it will go to the bottom of the water table and sink to the bottom it has a low solubility so it will be a permanent source of pollution of groundwater and it's known carcinogen and it most of the time it's not a primary carbon source for bacteria to use it so here's a typical example of the dna for tce most of the time dry cleaners and also the electronic factory manufacturing factory because they use tce to decrease the circuit board and also aircraft manufacturing and and also car factory wherever you circuit boards are used they use tcu to you know decrease those parts um so those end up in the ground water and if you have this kind of problem you have like clay lens along with groundwater this tce collects in the clay lands and then it's going to drop into the bottom of the water table and become you know form a immiscible layer and then it slowly leaks into the groundwater become a very permanent source of pollution uh forever and so this is one of the major um problem in the u.s for cleaning up tc contamination um so again this uh the challenge for tce is the the dean apple is uh trapped on this clay lenses and it's hard to get rid of and it creates a soluble plume for years okay that's a major problem with tce contamination so how do you clean up this kind of pun contamination you do soil extraction you do pump and treat you can do physical or reactive barriers to stop the plume from spreading you can do air and hydrogen sponging and then you can use the microorganism simulate the production of good bacteria and then of course we can give you a lot of money you can use surfactant so surfactant will make this chemical more bioavailable so bio remediation is the best way to do this tce and oil cleanup in subsurface because of these reasons there is no additional disposal cause at low maintenance and does not create any eye shower and capable of impacting um large area and decreasing site cleanup so so those are some of the um advantage of using bioremediation for cleanup of tce as well as oil spills in subsurface condition especially groundwater um let's talk about um a little bit about fundamentals of biodegradation one more time just there is no super bug we cannot use them you cannot use genetically modified organisms in cleanup um all organisms our compounds eventually will biodegrade but it takes time for bacteria to you know evolve enzyme um it also needs specific conditions such as the nutrient availability and whatever is lacking inside and again important part is the contaminant should be bioavailable if it is not bioavailable the bacteria are not going to go you know degrade this compound and then you need to look for the limiting factors mostly oxygen nitrogen phosphorus those are some other uh limiting factor in in in the in the contaminated site um then we look for the what is happening once you provide all that the organism going to metabolize and you need to look for the metabolic activity of microbes and and then you can choose between aerobic and aerobic degradation if the anaerobic works for you just um you know simulate anaerobic conditions and enhance the microbes and then you can reduce the aqueous concentration of contaminant and then you can reduce the contaminant mass and these are some of the advantage of using microorganism the most significant process is reduction of contaminant mass in the system so you permanently remove the chemicals so you don't have a future liability so the process is simple the organism can using the contaminant and mineralizing it and into carbon dioxide water and other salt and sometimes the biotransformation happens um example tce converted to dce okay um so biodigression involves a lot of extraction of energy from organic molecules the bacteria get energy so they oxidize the compound and they grow on it and make more biomass okay so that's why this is very advantageous using microorganism for cleanup of these two classes of chemicals um again revisiting the degradation process there are three ways to do it the best way is microorganism to use the contaminant as primary carbon source okay if that is the case then that's the easiest way to go because the organism is using the contaminants such as tca sole carbon source oils oil component and soil carbon source sometimes they use this component as secondary substrate so they live on other carbon source like glucose other other easily available carbon source um but they also use this as a secondary substrate okay um and also the compound is not in high enough concentration in the contaminated site so they depend on other carbons and then the third process is co-metabolic condition so in this case you have to provide um additional carbon so such as glucose to enhance the bacterial biomass okay so let's look at the requirements for microbial growth you need to have electron accepted the electron donor could be the contaminant itself our carbon source could be contaminant itself got to have these conditions for bacteria to be happy right ph temperature and then the limiting factor and sometimes you have to put some trace element this trace element most of the time subsurface is okay mostly the limiting factor nitrogen phosphorus and if it is aerobic the oxygen okay so you gotta have various electron acceptor options not only aerobic you can use the uh like last class i talked about nitrate reducing sulfur reducing iron reducing condition if there is no oxygen available and then the pollutant itself could be used as electron donor and the energy source the bacteria use them and convert them to co2 and water and then they use this to grow as well to make more bacterial cell so again you can use both aerobic and anaerobic if oxygen is terminal accepted and the process is aerobic other processes are anaerobic depending on what is electron acceptor used in anaerobic process um in most cases bacteria can only use one terminal electron acceptor so if nitrate reducing condition if nitrate is available it is nitrate when nitrate is completely current then there's going to be a transition of bacteria then go for next electron acceptor condition available in the site like sulfate or iron so only one dominating electron accepting condition most of the time that's what work in real world okay and then we have faculty organism that could use oxygen as well as other nitrogen oxygen containing soil such as nitrate and sulphate um here is a bacterial metabolism aerobically and anaerobically you can use oxygen electron acceptor and you can use co-metabolic condition using additional carbon source and anaerobically various salt you can use nitrate manganese ion sulfate and methanogenic condition carbon dioxide could be used so this is what pictorially represented in this um slide so here is your dm the ellen apple from your underground storage gasoline tank when it gets get into this ground water um the first organism that use up is aerobic organism when all the oxygen is gone then you can see the second group of agonists and i take over his nitrate reducing condition then iron reducing conditions sulfur reducing condition methanogenic and this is the natural order of redox potential so this is how it works so when oxygen run out then you have a nitrate is used electron acceptor then iron then sulfate and carbon dioxide which is the methanogenic conditions so that's the order of redox condition so here is from the literature you can look at electron acceptor conditions with different rank one to four one is highly biodegradable four is not biodegradable so here's some other compound solvents b-tags pcbs and chlorinated compound like pce and tce you can see that aerobic condition most of the time is highly biodegradable but you can see under anaerobic conditions acetone can be degraded and this tce and pce can be determined using anaerobic conditions and then b text also okay um bio elimination practice basically uh you need to make sure the physical and chemical and characteristics of the site you need to understand what kind of condition it is if it is for example clay soil then you're going to have a serious problem because clay are going to absorb a lot of this contaminant so it's not going to be available for by remediation you need to use some free treatment to make it available it will be more expensive and you understand the complete pathway of what are the players microbial players in the contaminated site what kind of activity they do and they again understand environmental condition and once you know that then you promote these organism promote this condition and then that's what this engineering aspect of cleaning up is okay so this is just basic fundamental stuff once you know each site what you need then you go and provide that to the particular site again oxygen is the primary source most of the contaminant sites are cleaned up by aerobic process uh because of the um the aerobic bacteria faster than anaerobic bacteria and here's a typical example how much oxygen needed for typical um you know benzene toluene compound and what product you get everything is converted to carbon dioxide and mineralized okay so in most of the cases oxygen is all you need to supply and everything else is in place okay so how do you deliver oxygen um if you don't have it in the site and you can use hydrogen peroxide pump the iron peroxide below ground and you can aerate your water and pump the aerated water instead of delivering oxygen in the gaseous form and you can do passively using membrane and then you can also aerate using in a pump to air it so those are commonly used method okay so in in a gaseous harmony you usually when you use air you use bio-venting process i mentioned in the last class if your contaminant is above the water table between the surface and and the water table is in between there above the water table you use air sparging uh when the contaminant is in the below the water table move below the water table so these are the some of the common method used for aerating the site okay then um the dehalogenation reaction for chlorinated solvent if your compound is highly chlorinated like tce um you're going to you know use stripping the halogen and put a hydrogen in its place so here is a typical reaction of halogenated compound and the chlorine is removed reductively and you put in chlorine in place you put a hydrogen so this is called d-halo respiration and then anaerobic conditions and you can also use co-metabolic conditions so here what we are using is this um tce itself has electron acceptor so you're just replacing chlorine with the electron um so d-halo respiration in chlorinated um contaminated site is very commonly used um as most of the time it ended up tc converted into ethane which is harmless product and and we can enhance this by co-metabolic process using ec carbon you can have more bacteria involved in this process um high percentage electron donor goes towards dechlorination okay um this dehydrogenation and depend on hydrogen-producing bacteria to produce hydrogen because you need to have the electron which is the preferred primary substrate okay so this is a typical example here is your microorganism chlorinated solvent cells is the electron acceptor you give electron donor and so it's going to consume and then you replace this chlorine with hydrogen so here's a pce you can see one chlorine at a time is replaced and this is called reductive declination process until you get to ethane all the chlorines are replaced and then chlorine becomes chloride and then it precipitate out it become harmless okay so and then um sometimes the reaction stops depending on you know the condition for example pce can be converted into tce and the reaction stopped tce is still you know a very toxic uh equally toxic hpce okay so that's what i just talked about so if the reaction stops from pc to tca you're you're you know still having toxic chemical in your contaminated site and so this is more hazardous than the parent compound and so when same thing with t uh tcet dc dc accumulates dc can be 50 times more hazardous than tce and sometimes you get vinyl chloride from tce metabolism which is carcinogenic so in anaerobic condition this happens then you need to promote aerobic bacteria to get rid of this vinyl chloride so that's why you need to understand the whole process of what is going on in the site so you cannot have just simply monitoring parent compound and say yeah i cleaned up side that's not going to work you need to make sure you show what happened to that compound do the whole mass transfer and complete mass balance what happened and then the co-metabolic process it's a photovoice transformation process uh because the organism that using other carbon cells the same enzyme could also convert the contaminant so so this is commonly used and but the problem is when you have this um additional carbon source you're promoting a lot of the other organisms they're going to use this carbon source but it's not going to do anything to your contaminant so you need to you have this problem of so promoting the right organisms but not promoting all the organisms we call that wheat bacterias like a weed so you wanted to make sure that you promote the organization that carry out your particular d chlorination or dehalogenation reaction so here is again the example of selective enhancement of reductive dechlorination the competition for hydrogen is in subsurface is big because most of the time the hydrogen can be used by other organisms like methanogenic bacteria can use hydrogen to convert them to methane gas or self-reducing bacteria so you need to have this have hydrogen partial pressure and hydrogen balance and you want to make sure this competition is not going to um you know inhibit your dechlorination process so that's another um tight rope uh you need to walk um when you're doing this kind of cleanup so what kind of electron donors you could use um if you are using co-metabolic condition you can use a lot of alcohol and acids um fatty acids so you can use a lot of fermentable compounds you can use like molasses and and corn syrup and anything that is cheaper you can use um hydrogen is apparently your electron donor so hydrogen can become from a variety of organic substrates and so that's why you need to do a small scale field study a small scale studies before you actually do which donor is going to work for you in the field electron donor so here is a variety of donors commonly used anywhere from acetate to molasses to a lot of different compound like chi some other base from chicken menu cheese whey corn stick liquor could be used and then you can use some fine chemicals um you can use depending on how expensive or how cheap you want to do your cleanup process so there's a lot of electron donors commonly used to do the cleanup um just to go through the enhanced bio attenuation process um you can do the petroleum hydrocarbon chlorinated um solvents the electron accepted electron donor category so you can use aerobically anaerobically depending on your site and how you do this biospa using oxygen slow release oxygen you can use aerobically and anaerobically can do that also and then chlorinated solvent cleanup most of the time the electron donors are as i said benzoic lactate and molasses molasses is very commonly used because it's cheap compared to other carbon sources okay so those are i give you a general um case studies for heavy metal for phytoremediation using pyro remediation and then tce and oils will clean up below surface so this is a lot of people are done there's a lot of success stories that i'm just giving a general overview okay um and some limitation in the process of like competition for electron um acceptor process so now i'm going to talk about uh some specific cleanup that i was involved with and i i i had some research project i conducted in cleaning up a particular explosive contaminated site in louisiana i'm going to share some of those results with you and then i'm going to talk about the coastal oil spill that bp oils cleanup and 2010 in louisiana which i was involved um also so i'm now going to talk about this specific cleanup case studies okay so this particular one is talking about cleaning up of explosive contaminated style in this particular ammunition site in the town in louisiana so this tnt was considered as a recalcitrant because this compound has been sitting there since the second world war in from 1930s during the production of second world war this component started produced in that site but the compound is still there at a high concentration nothing happened to them so they classified as recalcitrant um and their recursion trend because of the unusual substitution if you look at tnt it has three nitro groups in its structure um of toluene and so toluene could be easily degraded but when he added the nitrous substituent back to her hard time um you know degrading that compound so when you have this unusual substitution like chlorine and other halogen or nitro and then then it become recursed and and then other reasons also when you have high molecular size like plastics um again why the vector didn't do the cleaner because the enzyme was not synthesized um the compound uh the compound itself it failed to enter the transport process there is no suitable permeates to transport them into the cell the compound is unavailable due to the limited limitation of solubility tnt maximum solubility is only 100 ppm in water and and then when you have high concentration of the compound and it's going to be toxic to the bacteria so these are some of the reason why this compound persisted for a long time so if you look at bacterial metabolism just a biochem 101. um he has his metabolic pathway in bacteria normally they use glucose and so when they do that they they do these glycolysis and then they convert them to acetyl-coa and then the restylane go to krebs cycle and then the electron transport system where when the electrons are transferred from one electron period to another electron carrier you bacteria gets this atp so from one glucose you can get 38 atp molecule and when you have lung chain fatty acid what they do they do better oxidation pathway which is chopping two carbon at a time converting them to acetyl-coa and and take the rest of the crop cycle so bacteria is not inventing any new pathways these are the pathways through the lung evolutionary process the organisms have evolved into so when they see this new chemical that we throw at them what they do they modify the structure so they make some enzyme like dioxygenase monooxygenase to uh to break the ring and then once they convert them to either an acid or alcohol then they shunt those metabolites into these existing pathways so this is the simple basic mechanism of microbial physiology so they always use the existing pathways so they never create any new pathway for the new chemical we're throwing at them all bacteria does is modify the compound and then try to fit them in any one of these pathways okay um in most of the time the cleanup in real world is not pure culture it is synergistic degradation so there are two or three groups of organisms um they do one group organism do biotransformation and then convert the compound to some metabolite another group take them to next step until it's completely mineralized so you need to have more than one group of organism doing this reaction until you eliminate it so very rarely you see pure culture in cleanup process most of the time it is synergistic you need to have a mixed culture of bacteria in cleanup style so this particular site i'm talking about is contaminated with this three explosive compound tnt rdx and hmx so if you look at it these are all have this nitro group make it very unusual um substituent to this molecule that makes it hard and that makes it persistent in the environment for a long time okay so there's a trinitrotoluvin this is extra 135 tri nitro 135 triazine commonly called royal demolition explosive are rapid detention explosive the two names that's why it's called rdx commonly known as plastic explosive then we have hmx which is high melting explosive at the octo hydro one three five seven tetra nitro one three five seven tetra associate so these three chemicals persisted in this soil for more than 75 years never went away and this is this particular site so i live down here this particular site is up in north part of the state and the town is mindan this particular set is more than you know close to 16 000 acres and it's been contaminated since 1941 and this is a big area um and a lot of production said when it was highly active there are eight factories right there in the site that produced this various bombs chemical and then they stopped production in 1994 and now currently it's because of this contamination and they fenced off this area and in a caretaker status so the army by law has to clean up the site before they um use this site for any other purpose they can hand over to local government but they cannot hand over until they clean it up completely to the regulatory standard so so that's where this side is right now um so we got involved in doing some research in this particular site to look for how to clean up this site so what we did we did review the existing data we did a very extensive physical chemical [Music] analysis of the site a collected sample brought to the lab we characterized this sample and we did small bio-treatability study and then we assessed and then we did the bioremediation study and then we recommended one method so this is what any fire immigration um company they when they do the cleanup this is what they do they do look at what kind of data is already there in the site and then you collect sample and go through this process and then finally execute the cleanup so our objective is to look for first why these chemicals are there for such a long time are there microbes inside that can clean up the microbes are not there okay that was a very basic question and so we if the microbes cannot use this compound can we use this electron donor i just talked about provides a molasses to you know produce more bacteria maybe they will pick up these compounds so those are some basic simple questions we ask so we went to the site collected we characterized we collected extensive soil sample um and um they did the analysis just to show hmax and hplc you know come at 3.3 uh minute retention time rdx come at 4.8 and tnt comes at 10.69 minutes and then when you extract the soil and you can see all three of them so the hmx rdx and tnt it also has other residues and some of them are bomb chemicals some of them are metabolized but but we are concerned about these three chemicals and how to clean up these three chemicals in this particular site so the this is a sixteenth almost sixteen thousand acres so um if you look at the t and d contamination as four thousand to ten thousand milligram per kilogram of soil so the lowest range was four thousand the highest was at ten thousand and rdx is 800 to 1900 milligram per kilogram hmx is 600 to 900 milligram this is the actual concentration of these explosives in this soil right the army wants to bring this to below 200 and the rdx to below 50 hmx to below um 20. so that's their goal before they can handle so first thing we ask a simple microbiology question we put put the soil and enrich the soil transferred isolated fuel colonies and basic microbiology and then we use the different conditions um and these are some of the media we use basic mineral cell media and and then we have another condition commodore body condition with glucose in the lab and then the uh once you isolated the you know stored the bacteria and then did one by one experiment okay we isolated 22 pure cultures we screened them all each one of them it's a very tedious time consuming process and i'm going to just give share results with maybe two bacteria and it's no time to share all of them so we staphylococcus is one of them and bacillus levolactic is another one we grew this back pure culture in different conditions so we had obviously control no bacteria and then we had used the tnts soul carbon source no other carbon in the in the flask and if you look at tnt has nitro groups so you could use tnt as a nitrogen source or bacteria so we eliminated the ammonium salt from the media the only source of nitrogen is the tnt and then we used co-metabolic condition where we had glucose and the explosive together so these are the various conditions we use and then we analyze we monitor the growth and we analyze the compound in these cultures so here's so quickly to go through um if you look at staff various growth conditions uh control carbon source nitrogen shows co-metabolic conditions you can see the growth was better when you have additional carbon source with glucose and explosives and then when you use them as nitrogen source they've actually used that tnt as nitrogen source that somehow they kind of remove the nitro group and use the um tnts nitrogen source and then the carbon source also um bacteria grow on it okay the best growth obviously was co-metabolic conditions okay um and then the degradation of the t and d can see the same thing the chromatovoid condition was faster than carbon source conditions okay same almost almost same um the trend for baseless various condition the core metabolic work the best komar walk removed tnt the best okay but when you when you use the other explosive the story is different rdx cannot be used as soul carbon source and you use rdx as soon common source nothing happened to the culture only co-metabolic conditions showed growth and co-metabolic conditions removed the rdx and it couldn't use other nitrogen source um carbon source both organisms did the same staph and bacillus so the take home is tnt if you if you provide the right condition vector could use some either as carbon source or as nitrogen source but of course we had a additional carbon sources called metabolic it was faster but the other two explosive the rdx and then the hmx did the same thing um hmx um only co-metabolic condition worked in both cases it is the same story for 10 of the isolates like other 10 um isolate worked a little bit with hmx and rdx okay so that this most simple enrichment study and isolated fuel culture with each one of them showed a general trend tnt if you put the right condition can be degraded without any trouble for the rdx and hmx though you need to provide additional carbon source otherwise this going to persist for a long time which is what's happening at the site okay so this is a simple degradation study then we looked at how what kind of method will work whether you need to use land farming soil slurry reactor composting phytoremediation which method to recommend so we looked at the literature all the different method we just i just talked about um again to revisit uh bioremediation definition so we want to intentionally use the degradation process so we enhance the microbial activity and we again same protocol for bioremediation go through different existing methods and then which method to use for treatability style and so we choose these two method the science layer reactor the reason for that is if the method is fast uh you can um remember we can remove the contaminant really really fast but the disadvantage is that is a capital intensive is going to cost you more money okay the uh land farming has a potential for significant savings the operating cost is less but the reaction time is slow compared to so we want to compare these two and give the army an option which one to use okay so we set up a small salsa reactor and we had a control there was no molasses added and then we had treatment we had molasses added we had a slow mixing and this was with 20 percent slurry you put soil and make it slurry with water all you add is just the molasses to the treatment and normal ancestor that's all we didn't do anything else and then we just periodically took sample and analyze what's in the soil so here's the average of those two treatment and control so when he had molasses added as co-metabolic conditions um you can see that at tnd concentration going down really fast in the red line and when there was no molasses it's going down but it's very very slow right so adding molasses point three percent by volume um really helped your tnt went down to the recommended level uh within um six months of the reactor operation so the army wants to bring it below 200 we did bring it to below 200 in six months um surprisingly the rdx also went down because it's uh again it's because of we're enhancing not pure culture in the future it didn't work but in the soil adding molasses helped to bring in a lot of microbial activity so it took a long lag period nothing happened to the rdx for two months after two months rdx in the soil went down in the in the reactor with molasses and the reactor without molasses just hang around nothing happened right so co-metabolic condition the rdx went down after two months of reactor we were kind of first two months we kind of whether to stop the experiment or keep going but we said let's go for it you know six months like the tnt and and eventually it went down okay and um hmx is also uh took a very long time before you can see any uh decrease in concentration um so with without molasses it just persisted and uh vic molasses that took almost three months before you can see big drop in hmis so so the this small simple study um tell us that by putting molasses and mixing you can remove these three chemicals in a reactor uh within six months okay that's the that's the result from this study and then you want to do the landforming we started out in the small scale so just to simulate the land farming process in this pan we put the contaminated soil and in this pan we had molasses we just fled with molasses and then we drained the molasses and then we we till the soil by aerating the soil in the control normal i said just the water right um point three percent molasses in these two pan no no malasa just the water here okay uh again the same kind of result um when you had a molasses treated land farming pans you can see this tnt go down but it was not fast it was not as low as precisely reactor satellite given down below 200 but it did it did go down in the landform right because you can tell the landfarming is a solid face system whereas in slurry reactor we make it a slurry mixing so you have better mass transfer so the reaction was faster there here reaction was slow so but you can see this eventually went down um significantly okay um same story with rdx um it um it took a long time in the land farming pants it it started to go down okay after four months in landform and hmx also it took a very long time for hmx to go down but hmx eventually also started to go down so what does tell us if you if you have a lot of time and you don't want to have somebody holding gun on you to clean this site right away you can use land farming this will take more maybe two three years to clean it up but it eventually will clean up these chemicals so that's basically what but you need to apply these molasses every month once a month in the field so the summary of these two uh bioremediation science very landforming you can see this removal of this chemical 99 percent in tnt and slurry versus 82 rdx 97 investor 90 hms 87.71 so both of them removed slurry reactor remote um better and faster than landfall okay so now all i showed was um just the removal of the compound i had to do metabolic pathway and make sure there is no activation going on make sure all these compounds are converted to harmless product right so we did the mass balance study by spiking radio label tnt and then monitor the radioactivity of c14 tnt and you can see in the control most of the tnt is still there and you see some metabolite these are the biotransformation product of four amino di nitro toluene two amino di nitro toluene they are produced in the control but when you have molasses you can see this um 22 percent of the tnt is mineralized to carbon dioxide which is spectacular by 22 percent mineralization and 23 percent of the already labeled tnt ended up in making more biomass bacteria use them to make more bacteria in in you know in the cell and then we have a lot of other metabolite accumulating and but these two account for almost fifty percent of co2 as well as um accumulating in biomass almost the same story for land farming most of them without molasses remind in the soil nothing happened to the compound but when you add molasses you produce again mco2 and produce the the tca which is the biomass preservative material okay so this this tells us that tnt is mineralized and then this is a construction of bacteria not through culture the puke culture only i showed you a few cultures but this one has a lot of bacteria in the soil every all the organisms are enriched and they are doing a fantastic job of mineralizing this explosive so this is the kind of aerobic process because you're mixing your oxygen going in there and then you're also land farming you turn the soil over so you're actually um increasing the aerobic factory we want to know what is happening in anaerobic condition because we take one single soil particles you can find oxygen gradation the surface of the particle is aerobic as you go into the middle part of this anaerobic so if you can promote anaerobic activity you want to know what kind of dnd degradation happens in the soil so we promoted sulfur reducing bacteria by providing 20 millimoles sulfate and and then we developed a consortium of disulfurious species there are four different bacteria and they can certainly use tnt as soul carbon source they so there are anaerobic bacteria in the soil so you know so if you provide some sulfate and the bacteria will pick up this tnt soul carbon source so here is uh those consortium we use in the lab um this one is with the metabolic condition we use pyruvate substrate go substrate and then this one is without pyruvate just the tnt um and this is just a control without bacteria so you can see the growth and you can see the tnt go down so metabolic of course went fast and sold carbon source you know like four weeks uh almost before it went to zero in the culture so this tells us that if you as i said at the beginning you can provide some electron acceptor so like nitrate sulfate so oxygen of course is good but there are some anaerobic pockets so if you want to encourage that bacteria if there is some sulfate already there why not you enhance the bacteria so that's what we did here and then we created a solid reactor anaerobic slurry reactor and enhance the activity and monitor tnt and you can see in the solar reactor the 6 000 milligram per kilogram of tnt went down within 100 days in the anaerobic conditions and the control when there is no bacteria and nothing happened to this dnt so there's no abiotic activity mostly biotic activity that taking over an anaerobic process again we did the ready level study we spiked some radial level tnt and accounted for complete mass balance um this particular anaerobic bacteria is a what we call is incomplete oxidizer it doesn't take the organic compound all the way to co2 so what it did was it um if you look at this column um the real reading label tnt 27 of it converted to the cell biomass most of them are converted to acetic acid so the acetic acid accumulated in the system 47.5 of tnt is converted acetic acid this particular consortium doesn't have that the final step to oxidize acetic acid to carbon dioxide so that's our end product from tnt to acetic acid then we produce nitrogen this has another metabolite nitrobenzoic acid butyric acid you know pentanoic acid and these are biotransformation product and so based on this we constructed the metabolic pathway so this is what's going on anaerobically so here is your tnt the the thing happening here is this transformation reduction of the nitro grouped amino group so this becomes four amino to six dinitro and then in the second position nitro group is reduced this will become two amino and then two and four amino already become two for diamino and then we couldn't catch some other metabolite the next metabolic carbohydrate is nitrobenzoic acid so we are we are um uh kind of suspecting this amino group is clean there is a deamination reaction this amino could be used as a nitrogen source for bacteria and then the methyl group is converted to carboxylic acid and we we found nitrobenzoic acid and then after that the ring cleavage and once the ring is cleaned and you have cyclohexanone and then fatty acids once you have fatty acid then bad oxidation pathway to carbon at a time chopped and converted acetyl-coa that goes to krupp cycle and then all the way it's everything is converted to acetic acid so you know pentanoid to betray propionic and acetic acid so this is of the end product from harmful tnt to harmless acetic acid acetic acid could be used by aerobic bacteria as a carbon source right so this is what's happening anaerobically in that soil so that's particular um [Music] site we recommended two choices we gave the army you could use a slight slurry reactor if you want to do a fast cleanup if you have a lot of time to clean up you use landform method there's a trade-off between the time versus the cost of cleanup and what they did was they they divided the site into several areas the immediate um area that if they want to hand over to the um to the local government they they did the reactor and then some area that uh protected for nature conservancy project they went with the uh land farming method so that's that's what that site has been cleaned up okay um i'm now can i continue with the one more case study in chandra you have nine yes yes time yes we are still trying okay so this is i was involved for a real cleanup and we did the lab study we did the treatability study and we recommended the method the method has been executed and out of the 15 000 acres i i was last told um half of it cleaned up seven thousand acres being cleaned up and handed over to the local go okay so now let's talk about the oil spill right this um some of you heard about this that 10 years ago little over 10 years ago on april 10 2010 we had a big oil spill right in our backyard i live 75 miles from this actual actual site where this bp oil blew up and so this was in the gulf of mexico and uh some of the history behind what happened is this is what happened and the explosion happened in deepwater rice and drilling platform 11 people died and it took until it happened in april until september 17th to stop the oil to cap the oil and it took a long time to contain and during that time we had fifty thousand to sixty thousand barrels of crude oil uh flow uh happen uh every day per day okay it covered white area 2500 square miles and by the time they capped the well there are 170 million gallons of oil spilled in the gulf of mexico this is the largest marine spill in us history okay 10 years ago um most of more than 50 of them were dispersed at the depth like when 10 000 feet below 5000 feet to the surface and then below okay so during that time they used 1.8 million gallons or this person which is commercial one called corexit and 6500 that was the dispersion they used from nalco chemicals and they used the dispersion at the site where the oil is coming at the below the seabed under the seabed and also used aerially they applied an open ocean so as a result a lot of things happen people are affected economically because all the fisheries shut down and like a lot of people lost their livelihood environment was severely damaged the whole state suffered economically and then we had problem geological problems in the gulf of mexico because of this oil problem um some of them are chronic problems some of them are acute so most of most of the acute problem um is gone but this chronic problem still persists people still have this effect in here okay um and just i just want to make a point that in gulf of mexico we have a natural seepage of oil in the seabed every year we have 50 million gallons of oil naturally comes out okay and that's a part of the natural process okay but this all of this oil came all at a certain time all at once that what's the problem so when it's slowly leaking microorganism takes care of that okay so first thing what they did was they want to kind of on on-site what institute burning a wire so they whatever oil that accumulated on this ocean surface they burn it up so they light up and they use some accelerant to burn the oil so you can see this big plume of burning of this crude oil and then they contain it they want to contain it they use these big uh you know skim skimmers and containers to contain this oil getting into the shore okay they use massive operation people spend billions and billions of dollars and so this is how the site looked like um pictorially schematically so this is where they drove um this is the sea surface 5000 feet to the um the sea floor and then they went 13 000 feet drill to reach this oil all right so that's where this um oil makanda so in the makanda reservoir the problem was it has high methane content and there was some problem with this automatic shedding valve that they were not properly taken care of so this methane built up and the methane blew up and as a result we had a big explosion and then the whole thing uh there's no containment so that's what happened okay so a lot of methane in this oil natural gas so is there some picture to show you the damage you can see oil on the surface on the shoreline most of the shore are wetland salt marshes saltmasters are covered and this is the gulf of mexico it's a florida um louisiana right here and this happened here so the current took the oil everywhere it went all the way to uk atlantic uh the loop current took them all the way to uk see the damage a lot of wildlife got killed and a lot of oil on the coastal marsh area and then you can see the uh activity on the uh surface of the ocean okay and it's the 707 721 miles of coastline of louisiana was affected a lot of them are this marsh wetland and maybe a lot of wetlands highly productive at land a very good fishery spots so all the fisheries sat down they cannot fish this area and just to show you more pictures what they do they they constructed some sand berms to to to catch the oil so it won't reach these fishery spots and then they put this um also the booms to contain oil and this is what's happening and uh you can see the damage when they do this kind of activity to contain oil okay um so more pictures to show you the they have small small barrier islands they cover the whole barrier islands with this um boom to make sure it won't reach because these are a bird sanctuary uh migratory bird land here they want to protect this and and they applied this dispersing agent right open open ocean they're blind okay so just if you look at the date there are different days there's a june picture and it's a july picture it looks like no oil right but when you go close and take sample the oil is still at the bottom or you can see within a month most of the volatiles were evaporated and uh some of the wave action took the oil back into the ocean but there is i'm going to show some close picture but still some oil here after the july picture um so you can see a lot of spa a lot of those local ecosystem this is oyster this is where they harvest oysters and they're all completely covered with oil actually they can't use them at all um for a long time we couldn't harvest oysters so you can see this the area that i showed you from long shot you don't see it but when you actually go close you can see the oil still there right in september it was still there you can see the initial oil and then gradually you can see the mark everywhere more pictures just to show you the damage to the ecosystem a lot of oil in the shore and let your wet marsh over there this is how it looks like in close up and this is the dispersant without this person when you don't have this person after you apply dispersion the oil is dispersed okay of course this person has its own toxic effect on the ecosystem but um at least it broke the oil into smaller particles and dispersed okay just to show you what happened in a picture um so when you have oil like this when you add this person it's it actually dispersed i will be it will be clear within few hours few minutes the dispersion has a really very good effect on oil so what happened the mass balance of oil according to nova um all the uh 170 million gallon of oil that spilled and 17 dp recovered right at the wellhead they sent some big pipeline to catch the oil and the five percent they did the open-air burning and then they a lot of small boats went and skimmed the oil using some pump [Music] sea water and oil mixed together but then later they separated then chemical dispersion using this corrects it and it dispersed into open ocean and went into this loop current into atlantic ocean um 16 percent is naturally dispersed um because of wave action and 85 percent is either evaporated are dissolved in in the ocean but we still have this 25 oil in the coastal bottom so every time there's a big hurricane or big wave action this oil can you know come back so this this is what they're worried about this 25 percent gonna have this um what do you call that chronic effect on the ecosystem so this is where we come in uh so how are you going to get rid of this 25 percent that is buried in this coastal ecosystem okay so my our research project was to just to help the oyster farmers because the oyster industry in the southeast louisiana is big and it's a small form uh not a big operation these are all small individual oyster farmers so they is a good industry in new orleans is famous for oyster um seafood and so we uh we uh went into these two sites um um where the oyster is um we collected the sample and brought to the lab and did our basic studies okay so this is how it looks like when we went to take example it looks pristine it looks clean from from uh uh distant okay when you when you go and collect samples at the bottom because it's all at the bottom of the coastal area you can find oil and this is oyster sample and then we collect the sediment oyster and water and we did the analysis of oil and and then we did the enrichment study for bacterial activity and how the oil can be cleaned up so what we did was we did the redox conditions of the sediment the sediment is not aerobic but sediment has a lot of nitrate and sulphur reducing bacteria if you just take one inch of the sediment you can smell the hydrogen sulfide so there's a lot of sulfuridation bacteria there so if you put enough sulfate is electron acceptor maybe this bacteria will take care of the oil right so we we set up various conditions nitro reducing sulfate reducing iron reducing methanogenic fermenting and then we put all of them together we call it mixed electron acceptor we want to promote all the bacterial activity in one condition and see whether that will do anything good okay uh we set up a satellite reactor and then we did the soil column study we took a core sample and then we mimic each of these conditions in core sample um so these are the um the slurry reactor conditions and we had a duplicate culture bottles and because of two sides there's so many bottles so we couldn't do a triplicate um and then every sampling event we sacrificed each um duplicate bottle and we did the total petrol hydrocarbon so we set up the condition and then we took the whole bottle for every week and then we did the analysis we followed the epa protocol the experimental setup showing different culture conditions in big shaker quickly the result we monitored the total petroleum hydrocarbon we didn't we didn't care about analyzing how much is aromatic how much is um you know aliphatic and polyaromatic we just did the one total carbon all the total area in the gc was taken and you can see when you have um the mixed condition when you have all the electron acceptor the degradation was better it was surprising i thought at the beginning of the lecture i told you right generally microorganisms wanted electronics at a time this is totally opposite i said oxygen first nitro reduces come then you know ion reducing bacteria but in this case when we put all of them electro accepted that condition removed oil better and and then you can see this blue line the blue line is the fermenting condition that means no electron acceptor it's just anaerobic we want to make sure the oil itself could be used as electron acceptor then so it can you know degrade and put the electron in the oil metabolites okay and this of course control um no electron acceptor at all um and then when you put individual electronics after the sulfate reducing condition so out of the mixed electronic set condition that it looks like the sulfate reducing bacteria is doing the bulk of the job so when you have only the sulfate you can see 55 oil removal and when you have nitrate um you have 30 oil removal so if we combine these two it accounts for the mixed electronic except conditioner 80 percent oil removal so this looks like there is a some kind of synergistic activity between these two groups of bacteria in this sediment and then based on this quick study of four months then we set up this core soil column experiment where we put several soil columns and mimic the same conditions and this soil come from the site i showed you we dig up the core sample and put it in there all we did was we pumped sulphate 20 millimole in sulfur reducing condition nitro reducing condition we put nitrate and mixed condition put them all together okay so quick result um we can see the the co2 production uh in the i'm only showing the mixed mixed condition you can see the co2 production going up um um really well um we dose it we dose it and based on the wave action so when when there is the high tide low tide and wave action we drain the column so you can see no co2 when we drain it and then when we flood it this water comes up so microorganisms are working on this oil and they and and and converting them to carbon axon and then we also monitored methane so you can see the methane compared to control and mixed electronics of condition produce more methane okay and different periods right and then we did the count how many bacteria are there um using this uh some kind of uh gross um analysis of making the media to promote only this kind of group of bacteria so it's not very accurate but it just gives a bulk part figure of what is going on in this condition so when you have all the electron acceptor that's where you have a lot of bacteria growing and in the soil column uh when you have this um um the blue line which is the sulfur reducing is the second best and then you have the the nitro the green line the methanogenic condition and then you have the nitro reducing condition okay so this is the order so when you have all the electronics that are triggered that you have better bacterial growth in the soil column and then we have sulfate methanogenic and nitro reducing conditions and just to show you what happened in the soil column at the beginning you can see the lot of this crude oil fraction in the column and then after 160 days you can see the same soil column uh mixed electronics or condition you can see the signature peaks coming down um after 290 days you can see almost minuscule amount of carbon left there and then this is the removal activity in the soil column and you can see mixed electron acceptor worked better than the slurry reactor in the soil column work better than slurry but the operation was almost you know 50 days compared to in the slow reactor result was 120 days so um the carbon removal was really good in mixed electron acceptor condition and then he went down sulphate and nitrate reducing conditions and just took the best condition we put this bacterial growth with the percent removal the mixed electron acceptor condition you see the the mimicking bacterial growth with the highest removal activities when they are actively growing and when the dividing cells in the soil column you see the best removal activity so and then it reached the point where most of the carbon is gone and you can see the bacteria started to go down the number of bacteria are going to go down like two order of magnitude down going down so so this just tell us that um if you provide you don't have to provide all the electronics you provide at least sulfate and nitrate there are already there some of it but according to our study need of 20 millimoles so we need to kind of formulate this to add this to this site uh maybe this will speed up the actual cleanup of those 25 percent oil in the coastal coastal sediments okay so it just took some electron microscope you see a lot of bacterial activity in the soil column all kinds of different heterogeneous populations so this study basically showed us that um again at the beginning i said the electron donor electron acceptor you need to know which one to add and if you find the right mix and the bacteria will do the job that's what we did here so the nitrate and sulfate reducing condition worked better for us when you add both of them mixed condition work really really better so um there was a little bit of surprise to us i thought one condition worked better than other but mixed condition worked really well also um so the funding for this work both of the study come from department of defense and army corps of engineers and national science foundation and lucian board a region so so that's the two um case studies i was personally involved i'm just sharing the data with you so i will stop here and i'm glad to take any questions okay thank you raj uh beautifully there there's some there are some uh questions right probably okay like is you stop you want me to stop sharing this one yes okay yes okay okay good it's bad wait i mean just a minute okay all right so i want to go through the first question okay so yeah it's talking about how to supply oxygen for aerobic institute by remediation i was briefly talking about both active and passive um you can actively pump hydrogen peroxide and you can actively form aerated water into the system and passively you can do um you know pump air but as i said it depends on where the contaminant is you can do between bio venting and air sparging by a venting is above the above the the water system and as forging is below if the oil is below so it depends on the site yeah okay and it's uh it's the second one all right what is the best method into the bacteria consultation to degrade biomaterial base if they need different conditions should we manually add them one by one or we add them together in the beginning well it uh as i said it's uh it's um you need to do a little bit of lab study first uh sometimes the nature throws some surprises like i showed you the last experiment we did and the mixed condition worked we put them all together that worked better we didn't expect it at all so we thought individual electronic software worked better so always uh it's good to do a little bit of bench scale study before you can apply this so there is no one uh size that will fit for all the scenarios so i i depend on the side it depends on what biomaterial um you're trying to clean up so okay so the uh third one um the effect that dissolved oxygen ammonia levels on the growth antigen the bacteria and vitamins are combined by crude oil the effect of dissolved oxygen ammonia level um we i didn't show you the the lab study the media and all that so you when we did this um oil spill study the aerobic conditions uh yes oxygen really worked well for our condition need to have anywhere from uh 2 milligrams per liter from 0.2 to 2 milligrams so we have like micro aerophyllic to aero big conditions so 2 milligram or less is okay oxygen in the water and then ammonia you need to have uh in our system 30 to 1 ratio a carbon nitrogen ratio for every 30 parts of carbon um one part of nitrogen so 30 to 1 ratio is what we used in our study so um so you got to do first how much nitrogen is already there in the site and then you work with that carbon nitrogen ratio any any other questions i'm still mute so okay is there any question for me if you have any uh please follow me yes uh thank you i think yeah ready yeah yeah okay uh right yeah yeah uh kind of flow out in indonesia not too big somewhere near karawaka yeah and they managed uh to get the the field uh stop but we do have a problem with mangrove uh-huh many of uh the plants were [Music] still contain some splashy oil okay what's the best way to secure the plant i mean it's not possible to people because mangrove is very long to grow and it's kind of a pity that they contaminated with the oil sludge yeah any any idea how to treat plants so is a mangrove is planted still alive they're not dead by this uh oil sludge some of them they still like yeah okay one that's a badly yeah we have to get rid of them but we still have some that uh possibly they they will surprise that i think they have to be so in our experience do you do you have some um salt marsh also in the mangroves you don't have any salt grass in that area because salt marshes really take up this oil very well so um and if you have salt moisture i don't know whether you can plant that will enhance your oil degradation process and and also it will promote the rhizospheric bacteria and so you have that the site i showed you has some short marsh and we the sample that we collected the root of those salt marks is where this bacterial activity are and those are the one that was actually doing the oil cleanup so so you can't have some you know help from the nature um otherwise you got it you got to add them uh maybe promote some particular anaerobic bacteria what is the redux in the sediment you know what kind of redux conditions it's a wave action you have to take into account the wave action every time wave comes in the tidal action uh it will oxygenate your sediment so yeah if it is kind of the zone between aerobic and nitro reducing then maybe you got to promote that activities there yeah okay we don't know yet yeah yeah and they'll have a lot of those um things you need to look into it but you cannot just show yeah this bacteria from the literature seem to remove maybe we have to do the no you have to look in your site okay what kind of plants are there what kind of redux condition is there how much wave action in your particular site is it a shallow coastal area yeah yeah okay okay yeah yeah yeah okay yeah i mean uh it is then when we start uh discussing about that then we have a funding so we haven't done anything okay so you are involved in that project so you got to collect some treatability study collect some sample looking what can activity you have in the sediments mangrove samples just to find out to what extent uh the the disrespect to the plants yeah it's largest in the in the sediment of the mangroves and you can look at the bacterial activity in that sediment whether but maybe sulfate reduces are there if you if it smells hydrogen sulfide definitely there is sulfate reducing activity going on so far we focus on the mangrove itself mangrove itself yeah but he said the mangroves are completely covered and so yeah and then you need to have other plants to help the mangrove so mangroves are very very susceptible to oil yeah very sensitive so for oil yeah thank you thank you so i think so uh this one for me i think the last one it might be so raj uh you mentioned about the uh uh this station so i missed the leaking from the uh gas station yeah underground yeah so that one the gas station or the owner of the gas station cannot afford to to pay for the cleanup right if the owner is still in business they have to they have to do the cleanup yeah but you cannot find the owner then the government will do the cleanup oh the government will clean up and then they have what you call it they have a super fund super fund yeah yeah in epa every budget every year the government put the money in the budget called super fund and the money is used for cleaning up the priority site this there are every year 1300 sites are considered priority site so they update every budget year what are the sites need to be cleaned up first so they use that super fund to clean up those sites and and then they try to recover the money later but if the gas station guys are still in operation then the government will come and ask them you know to clean up but if they're not there they're gone and nobody knows where they are then the government you said yeah yeah okay then no no other questions is it's already yes there are no other questions okay i think we we may close our uh class our session today and then we i will for the next weeks so uh because you mentioned uh the it might be the topic on the micro bio leave it on bio next week is a biological treatment of wastewater okay so it's of your vertical treatment and then the week after is uh microbial lipids and lignocellulosic okay okay next second biological treatment okay i'll talk about some basics and then i'll do some case studies okay things are uh will you be close uh i thought we can stop the uh in in the youtube i would like to thank and then uh next week uh we will have uh lecture from rosh on the biological treatment uh of wastewater thanks for thank you all right so thank you say hello to ross