Pli B3
Pli B3
Pli B3
Dr.Eng. R. Darmawan
15 Maret 2017
Traditional Treatments for Soil Contamination
Traditional treatments for metal contamination in soils are expensive and cost prohibitive
when large areas of soil are contaminated. Treatments can be done in situ (on-site), or ex
situ (removed and treated off-site). Both are extremely expensive. Some treatments that
are available include:
Once metals are introduced and contaminate the environment, they will remain. Metals do
not degrade like carbon-based (organic) molecules. The only exceptions are mercury and
selenium, which can be transformed and volatilized by microorganisms. However, in
general it is very difficult to eliminate metals from the environment.
Phytoremediation
• Volatilization
• Phytodegradation
• Chelation/compartment in leaves
Salt
• Phytodegradation • Phytoextraction
• Phytostimulation • Rhizofiltration
• Phytovolatilisation • Phytostabilisation
Use of Phytoremediation to Treat Organic Contamination
Phytodegradation
Phytodegradation, also called phyto-transformation, is the breakdown of
contaminants taken up by plants through metabolic processes within the plant,
or the breakdown of contaminants surrounding the plant through the effect of
compounds (such as enzymes) produced by the plants. Complex organic
pollutants are degraded into simpler molecules and are incorporated into the
plant tissues to help the plant grow faster .
• Certain micro-organisms can digest organic substances such as fuels or solvents that are
hazardous to humans and break them down into harmless products in a process called
biodegradation. Natural substances released by the plant roots – sugars, alcohols, and acids –
contain organic carbon that provides food for soil microorganisms and the additional nutrients
enhance their activity.
Phytovolatilisation.
Phytovolatilisation is the uptake and transpiration of a contaminant by a plant, with release of
the contaminant or a modified form of the contaminant from the plant to the atmosphere.
Phytovolatilisation occurs as growing trees and other plants take up water and the organic
contaminants. Some of these contaminants can pass through the plants to the leaves and
evaporate, or volatilise, into the atmosphere. Poplar trees at one particular study site have
been shown to volatilise 90% of the TCE they take up.
The Use of Phytoremediation to Treat Metal
Contamination
Phytoextraction
Rhizofiltration (‘rhizo’ means ‘root’) is the adsorption or precipitation onto plant roots
(or absorption into the roots) of contaminants that are in solution surrounding the
root zone. Rhizofiltration is similar to phytoextraction, but the plants are used to clean
up contaminated groundwater rather than soil.
For example, sunflowers were successfully used to remove radioactive contaminants from
pond water in a test at Chernobyl, Ukraine.
The Use of Phytoremediation to Treat Metal
Contamination
Contaminated water is either collected from a waste site and brought to the plants or
the plants are planted in the contaminated area, where the roots then take up the water
and the contaminants dissolved in it. As the roots become saturated with contaminants,
they are harvested.
Whitney Water Purification Facility, New Haven,
Connecticut, USA
Plants with high root biomass, or high absorption surface, with more accumulation
capacity (aquatic hyperaccumulators) and tolerance to contaminants achieve the best
results. Promising examples include Helianthus annus,Brassica juncea, Phragmites
australis, Fontinalis antipyretica and several species of Salix , Populus, Lemna and Callitriche .
The Use of Phytoremediation to Treat Metal
Contamination
Phytostabilisation
Phytostabilisation is the use of certain plant species to immobilise contaminants in the soil and
groundwater through absorption and accumulation by roots, adsorption onto roots, or
precipitation within the root zone of plants (rhizosphere). This process reduces the mobility of the
contaminant and prevents migration to the groundwater or air, and also reduces bioavailability for
entry into the food chain . This technique can be used to re-establish a vegetative cover at sites
where natural vegetation is lacking due to high metal concentrations in surface soils or physical
disturbances to surficial materials.
Exposure to TNT and RDX, and their degradation products causes symptoms such as anemia
and liver damage. These chemicals can be lethal and are suspected carcinogens.
Arabidopsis Thaliana
Phytodegradation of Processes
NR:
Nitroreductase
XplA:
RDX-degrading
cytochrome P450
NDAB:
4-nitro-2,4-diazabutanal
ADNT:
Monoaminodinitrotoluene
The key to phytoremediation success
Transfer of the science from the lab to the field
EARTHMASTER ENVIRONMENTAL
STRATEGIES INC.
WEBi-Earthmaster-UW partnership
EARTHMASTER ENVIRONMENTAL
STRATEGIES INC.
Edson, AB – Before treatment
5 cm
Roots
Amino
Plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR)
Acids
Stress Bacterium
Response
Plant Tissue
Phytoremediation of PHC
A B
Cn PHC
PHC-degrading
microbes [O] ω-OxGenase
oxidized
PHC
OH
OH
PHC
[O] DEHYD
O2 HH
oil O
O
droplet [O] ω-OxGenase
OH
OH
Cn fatty
O
O
acid
6m 3.5 m
15 13
5 1 3.5 m
6m
16 14 3.5 m
6 2
6m Planted un-impacted plot
Impacted Plot
7 3
6m
35 m
8 4
6m Soil sampling point
4m 1m
11 9 2m
12 10 2m
Un-impacted
sump Plot
PEPS use at
Salt Impacted Sites
EARTHMASTER ENVIRONMENTAL
STRATEGIES INC.
Plant responses to salinity
Inhibited germination
Decreased water uptake
Unbalanced sodium/potassium ratios
Inhibition of photosynthesis
Increased reactive oxygen species (ROS)
Increased ethylene production
PGPR doubles biomass
Norman Wells, NWT – End of Season (2010)
Soil Impact – Salt
Norman Wells, NWT – End of Season (2010)
Soil Impact – Salt
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• http://www.aslaoregon.org/updates/articles/phytoremediation-in-landscape-
architecture