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How kaolinite plays an essential role in remediating oil-polluted seawater

S. K. Chaerun and K. Tazaki
How kaolinite plays an essential role in remediating oil-polluted seawater
Clay Minerals (December 2005) 40 (4): 481-491

Abstract

An investigation was carried out on the bioavailability of kaolinite and the role it plays in remediating oil-polluted seawater, since kaolinite is known to enable hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria to grow well. Experimental results revealed that significant amounts of Al and Si dissolved from kaolinite were not observed ((P>0.05) in comparison with a control sample which contained no kaolinite) in the aqueous phase during the approximately 24 day experimental period. Transmission electron microscope observations and energy-dispersive spectroscope data revealed that some altered kaolinite particles appeared, connected to intact kaolinite and bacterial cells. Bacterial cells were associated and encrusted with intact and/or altered kaolinite clay particles, where mixed (C, O, Na and Si)-precipitates of kaolinite clays were formed on the surface of hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial cells. However, the uptake of Si (from kaolinite) by bacterial cells appeared to be more prevalent than Al, and there were no significant changes in basal spacings of kaolinite due to these altered kaolinite particles. Separate studies showed that hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria have a high resistance to Si. Thus, the present data suggest that Si from kaolinite may facilitate hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial growth as shown in our previous study (Chaerun et al., 2005), and the C-O-Na-Si complexes on the surfaces of bacterial cell walls may be the stimulator for hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial growth in seawater contaminated with oil spill.


ISSN: 0009-8558
EISSN: 1471-8030
Serial Title: Clay Minerals
Serial Volume: 40
Serial Issue: 4
Title: How kaolinite plays an essential role in remediating oil-polluted seawater
Affiliation: Jenderal Soedirman University, Indonesia Agrogeology Development Center, Central Java, Indonesia
Pages: 481-491
Published: 200512
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society, London, United Kingdom
References: 22
Accession Number: 2006-091203
Categories: Environmental geologySedimentary petrology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 3 tables
Secondary Affiliation: Kanazawa University, JPN, Japan
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 200650
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