• Title/Summary/Keyword: Oil bioremediation

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Effects of Bioremediation Products on the Oil Degradability (생물정화용 제품의 유류분해능 비교)

  • 김상진;신수경
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.33 no.2
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    • pp.157-162
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    • 1997
  • Recently the bioremediation technology has been widely used to recover the oil contaminated environments The application of bioremediation agents to oil polluted environments became common and thus many kinds of commercial products were imported into domestic market. In Korea, howcver. the standardization of bioremediation products quality is not yet established and results of efficacy test .ire scarce. In this study five oil spill bioremediation commercial products including microbial inoculants and en'cyme agents are tested for the oil degradation rate. From the results most products shows the strong oil emulsifying phenomena due to the contained chemical oil dispersant and the low oil degradation rate. Product D inhibited the oil degradability of microorganisms even in the natural sea water. From these results it could be concluded that in the near future the laboratory protocol and standardization of products quality for bioremediarion agents should be prepared to activate the effective application of bioremediation technology in Korea.

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Effects of Diesel Oil on the Population and Activity of Soil Microbial Community (토양미생물군집의 개체수와 활성도에 미치는 경유의 영향)

  • Seo, Eun-Young;Song, Hong-Gyu
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.32 no.2
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    • pp.163-171
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    • 1994
  • The effects of diesel oil on the microbial community in sandy loam soil were investigated, and the effects of bioremediation which was performed to enhance the removal of diesel oil from soil were also measured. The residual percentage of diesel oil was about 50% after 16 week incubation period. The bioremediation treatment increased the removal rate at 60~95%. When the soil was contaminated with diesel oil, the direct bacterial count, length of fungal hyphae, aerobic heterotroph and hydrocarbon degrader were increased by 2~3 orders of magnitude. The bioremediation further increased these numbers 10 to 100-fold. There were no difinite patterns of change in fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis activity in bioremediation-untreated soil, but about 10 times of increase of activity was observed in bioremediation-treated soil. Similar change was occurred in soil dehydrogenase activity.

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A Study of the Effectiveness of Bioremediation Agents to degrade the spilled oils on waters (미생물제제의 해상유출유 분해 효과에 대한 연구)

  • Lim Jae-Dong;Yun Jong-Hwui;Kim In-Soo
    • Proceedings of KOSOMES biannual meeting
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    • 2004.05b
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    • pp.73-79
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    • 2004
  • When large-scale oil spill happens, it will put the fatal impact on the ecosystem, ultimately harm human being seriously. Accordingly every coastal country invests to improve response technologies, of which oil removal by use of bioremediation agent is taken to be secondary or alternative cleanup method in a specific spilled area In this regards, the author attempts to find out the efficiency and effectiveness of bioremediation agent to oil slick by laboratory experiment as well as the possibility of bioremediation application to future spill accident and gets the some results. In this study, the effectiveness and efficiency of bioremediation agent to oil slick is examined by short-term laboratory test and it is found that bioremediation agent am degrade oils effectively. however, considering the environment c! spill site is quite different from that of lab, the author will carry on the on-scene test of bioremediation for longer period to look into the possibility of biorediation agent as one of oil spill response methods.

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Effectiveness of Bioremediation on Oil-Contaminated Sand in Intertidal Zone

  • Oh, Young-Sook;Sim, Doo-Suep;Kim, Sang-Jin
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.437-443
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    • 2003
  • Bioremediation technologies were applied to experimental microcosms, simulating an oil spill in a lower intertidal area. Three treatments (oil only, oil plus nutrients, and oil plus nutrients and microbial inocula) were applied, and each microcosm was repeatedly filled and eluted with seawater every 12 h to simulate tidal cycles. To minimize washing-out of the inoculum by the tidal cycles, microbial cells were primarily immobilized on diatomaceous earth before they were applied to the oiled sand. Oil degradation was monitored by gravimetric measurements, thin layer chromatography/flame ionization detector (TLC/FID) analysis, and gas chromatography (GC) analysis, and the loss of oil content was normalized to sand mass or nor-hopane. When the data were normalized to sand mass, no consistent differences were detected between nutrient-amended and nutrient/inoculum-amended microcosms, although both differed from the oil-only microcosm in respect of oil removal rate by a factor of 4 to 14. However, the data relative to nor-hopane showed a significant treatment difference between the nutrient-amended and nutrient/inoculum-treated microcosms, especially in the early phase of the treatment. The accelerating effect of inoculum treatment has hardly been reported in studies of oil bioremediation in the Tower intertidal area. The inoculum immobilized on diatomaceous earth seemed to be a very effective formulation for retaining microbial cells in association with the sand. Results of this study also suggest that interpretation of the effectiveness of bioremediation could be dependent on the selection of monitoring methods, and consequently the application of various analytical methods in combination could be a solution to overcome the limitations of oil bioremediation monitoring.

Evaluation of Bioremediation Efficiency of Crude Oil Degrading Microorganisms Depending on Temperature (온도에 따른 원유분해미생물의 생물학적 정화효율 평가)

  • Kim, Jong-Sung;Lee, In;Jeong, Tae-Yang;Oh, Seung-Taek;Kim, Guk-Jin
    • Journal of Soil and Groundwater Environment
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.72-79
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    • 2016
  • Bioremediation is one of the most effective ways to remediate TPH-contaminated sites. However, under actual field conditions that are not at the optimum temperature, degradation of microorganisms is generally reduced, which is why the efficiency of biodegradation is known to be significantly affected by the soil temperature. Therefore, in this study, the labscale experiment was conducted using indigenous crude oil degrading microorganisms isolated from crude oil contaminated site to evaluate the remediation efficiency. Crude oil degrading microorganisms were isolated from crude oil contaminated soil and temperature, which is a significant factor affecting the remediation efficiency of land farming, was adjusted to evaluate the microbial crude oil degrading ability, degradation time, and remediation efficiency. In order to assess the field applicability, the remediation efficiency was evaluated using crude oil contaminated soil (average TPH concentration of 10,000 mg/kg or more) from the OO premises. Followed by the application of microorganisms at 30℃, the bioremediation process reduced its initial TPH concentration of 10,812 mg/kg down to 1,890 mg/kg in 56 days, which was about an 83% remediation efficiency. By analyzing the correlation among the total number of cells, the number of effective cells, and TPH concentration, it was found that the number of effective microorganisms drastically increased during the period from 10 to 20 days while there was a sharp decrease in TPH concentration. Therefore, we confirmed the applicability of land farming with isolated microorganisms consortium to crude oil contaminated site, which is also expected to be applicable to bioremediation of other recalcitrant materials.

Treatability Study on Oil-Contaminated Soils for Bioremediation Application (유류오염토양의 생물적용기술 적용타당성 검토)

  • Lee, Yeon-Hui;Seol, Mi-Jin;O, Yeong-Suk
    • 한국생물공학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2001.11a
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    • pp.578-581
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    • 2001
  • A treatability study was conducted using a hydrocarbon-contaminated soil for the oPtimization of bioremediation strategy best fit to a given set of contamination. The applicability of nutrients, biosurfactant, and oil-degrading microorganisms were examined by monitoring $CO_2$ evolution and oil degradation The addition of inorganic nutrients in the form of slow released fertilizer accelerated the initial rate of $CO_2$ evolution by a factor of 3. The application of oil-degrading microorganisms did not significantly increased $CO_2$ evolution or biodegradation efficiency. Application of a commercial biosurfactant was most effect in terms of the total $CO_2$ evolution and the oil degradation rate. The results indicate that $CO_2$ evolution measurement was found to be a simple and reliable countermeasure of crude oil hydrocarbon mineralization for the rapid determination of the best-fit bioremediation strategy.

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The Study for Performance TestㆍVerification Standard, Form approval procedure(draft) of OSBA (생물정화제제의 성능시험ㆍ검정기준, 형식승인절차(안) 등에 관한 연구)

  • Chung Jin-Won;Yoon Joo-yong;Shin Jae-Rouk;Kim Han-Gyu
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Marine Environment & Energy
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.16-27
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    • 2003
  • For the last decade, some 400 small and large oil spill accidents have occurred every year. Such accident blow a serious damage to the marine resource and ecosystem, which can't be estimated in terms of economic and environmental losses. The physical/chemical methods used currently may be effective at the initial stage of accidents, but they can't serve to remove the spilled oil completely. Moreover, the dispersant may lead to a secondary contamination detrimental to the lives inhabiting wet lands, beaches and tidal zone. Thus, a new decomposing technology Is required for the environmentally sensitive areas. Bioremediation is the active use of biological techniques to mitigate the consequences of a spill using biological processes and refers both of stimulation of pollutant biodegradation and/or to enhance ecosystem recovery Bioremediation is an economically attractive method for the clean-up of oil-contaminated area. Bioremediation has been demonstrated to be an effective oil spill countermeasure for use in cobble, sand beach, salt marsh, and mud flat environment.

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Application of Effective Microorganisms for Bioremediation of Crude Oil Spill in Taean, Korea (태안 유출 원유의 생물정화를 위한 유용미생물 적용)

  • Lee, Eun-Ju;Lee, Sang-Mo;Lee, Gun-Taek;Kim, In-Sung;Kim, Yong-Hak
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.17 no.7
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    • pp.795-799
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    • 2008
  • We have studied bioremediation of effective microorganisms on crude oil spill in Taean, west-coast of Korea. Oil contaminated soil samples were collected on December 14, 2007, seven days after the Hebei Spirit oil-spilled accident. Total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) was measured to evaluate the effectiveness of effective microorganisms (EM) which were composed with yeast, photosynthetic bacteria and lactic acid bacteria on oil degradation. TPH concentration before EM treatment was 323.8 mg/kg, whereas TPH concentrations on 2 days after EM treatment and that of control (without EM) was 102.1 mg/kg and 170.6 mg/kg, respectively. On six days after EM treatment TPH was 91.3 mg/kg and that of control was 127.7 mg/kg. Percentages of degraded crude oil were 47.3% without EM and 68.5% with EM, 60.6% without EM and 71.8% with EM on 2 and 6 days after EM treatment, respectively. These results clearly showed that the application of effective microorganisms toward oil-contaminated soil was quite useful to degrade crude oil spill. These results were derived from the effects of biostimulation of microbial media nutrients and bioaugmentation of effective microorganisms. If we carefully apply these effective microorganisms, it can be a useful bioremediation method to recover oil-contaminated marine ecosystems.

해상 유출 기름 제거 시 미생물을 이용한 제거 기술의 종류와 고려하여야 할 문제점 분석

  • 장승룡
    • 한국석유지질학회:학술대회논문집
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    • autumn
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    • pp.68-84
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    • 1999
  • Biodegradation is a natural weathering process by microorganisms to decompose spilled oil or environmental contaminants. To accelerate this process, applying nutrients (fertilizer) or more microorganisms to naturally occurring microorganisms is called 'Bioremediation.' Presently, most popular response technique to spilled oil is mechanical cleanup using booms or skimmers. For the alternative to this technique, chemical dispersants, in-situ burning are used. Another promising alternative is bioremediation and it can clean oil contaminated seashore during enough time. In this paper, types of bioremediation technologies, its usage potential, and important consideration issues when applying this technique were summarized.

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The Study for Practical use of Bioremediation Agent in Oil-Contaminated Area (해상유출유 오염지역에서의 미생물처리제 활용 방안 연구)

  • Chung Jin-Won;Yoon Joo-yong;Shin Jae-Rouk;Kim Han-Gyu
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Marine Environment & Energy
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.3-15
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    • 2003
  • Recently more than 450 incidents of oil spill a year have occurred in nearshore of Korea, which caused unmeasurelable losses in fisheries and severe damage in marine ecosystem. Two approaches remain paramount in any response to marine oil spill : the enhancement of natural dispersion of the oil by using dispersants, and mechanical recovery using booms and skimmers. A technique currently receiving fresh attention is the enhancement of the natural bioremediation of oil through the application of micro-organisms and/or nutrient. Oil, like many natural substances, will biodegrade over a period of time into simple compounds such as carbon dioxide, water and biomass. Bioremediation is the term used to describe a range of processes which can be used to accelerate natural biodegradation. More specifically biostimulation is the application of nutrients, and bioaugremetation or seeding is the addition of microbes specially selected to degrade oil. Bioremediation is an economically attractive method for the clean-up of oil-contaminated area. Bioremediation has been demonstrated to be an effective oil spill countermeasure for use in cobble, sand beach, salt marsh, and mud flat environment.

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