A biorremediação é uma alternativa atraente para o tratamento de solos contaminados com hidrocarbonetos de petróleo. No entanto, a efetividade do processo pode ser limitada não só pelas características do contaminante, mas também pela sua biodisponibilidade. Este trabalho tem como meta o estabelecimento de procedimento preliminar para identificar o fator principal (recalcitrância ou biodisponibilidade) que interfere negativamente na biodegradação, resultando em baixas eficiên-cias. Foram realizados testes em microcosmos contendo solo aplicando as técnicas de bioestímulo e bioaumento. Experimentos semelhantes foram conduzidos em meio líquido contendo óleo cru e microorganismos extraídos do solo contaminado, nutrientes e inóculo microbiano (Rhodoturula glutinis e Nocardia nova). Após 30 dias, o maior nível de biodegradação (98.8%) foi obtido na condição com bioaumento em meio líquido, indicando que o problema principal de biodegradação de hidrocarbonetos de petróleo pode estar associado à baixa biodisponibilidade destes no solo e não apenas a recalcitrância intrínseca do poluente residual.Bioremediation is an attractive alternative to treat soils contaminated with petroleum hydrocarbons. However, the effectiveness of biodegradation process can be limited by both contaminant characteristics and its bioavailability in soil. This work aims at establishing a preliminary procedure to identify the main factor (hydrocarbon recalcitrance or its bioavailability) that impairs the biodegradation, possibly resulting in low remediation efficiencies. Tests in soil microcosms were carried out applying biostimulation and bioaugmentation techniques. Similar experiments were conducted using liquid medium containing crude oil and microorganisms, both of them extracted from a weathered contaminated soil sample, nutrients and microbial inoculum constituted of Rhodoturula glutinis and Nocardia nova. After 30 days, highest microcosms biodegradation levels (98.8%) were obtained with bioaugmentation in liquid medium, pointing out that the main problem of petroleum hydrocarbon utilization by microorganisms was associated to its availability and not only to the intrinsic recalcitrancy of remaining pollutants.
Process tailoring aims to customize a software process to better suit the specific needs of an organization when executing a software project or due to a social context in which the process is inserted. Tailoring happens, in general, through variations in the process elements, such as activities, artifacts, and control flows. This paper aims to introduce a technique that uses process mining to uncover elements from the software process that are candidates for tailoring. The proposed approach analyzes the execution logs from several process instances that share a common standard process. As a result, execution traces that differ from the standard process flow are identified and assessed to uncover their variable elements. The proposed technique was evaluated with data extracted from a real software development scenario when a large system was under development for a set of Brazilian Federal Institutes of Education, Science and Technology.
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