2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2008.11.025
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Effect of salinity on vanadate biosorption by Halomonas sp. GT-83: Preliminary investigation on biosorption by micro-PIXE technique

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Cited by 21 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…An investigation of V(V) biosorption by Halomonas sp. GT-83 showed an uptake capacity of 52700 mg kg 1 dry weight at pH 3 (Ghazvini and Mashkani, 2009). The biosorption efficiency is likely highest at pH 3 (relative to more alkaline values tested) because most V(V) exists in cationic form at low pH (Fig.…”
Section: Many Microorganisms Are Highly Resistant To Vanadium For Exmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…An investigation of V(V) biosorption by Halomonas sp. GT-83 showed an uptake capacity of 52700 mg kg 1 dry weight at pH 3 (Ghazvini and Mashkani, 2009). The biosorption efficiency is likely highest at pH 3 (relative to more alkaline values tested) because most V(V) exists in cationic form at low pH (Fig.…”
Section: Many Microorganisms Are Highly Resistant To Vanadium For Exmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Temperature appears to have little impact on V(V) bisorption, whereas increasing microbial cell density may reduce V(V) adsorption capacity due to cell aggregation (Ghazvini and Mashkani, 2009). …”
Section: Accepted Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In comparison, another strain showed a different mechanism. Ghazvini and Mashkani (2009) isolated a Halomonas sp. strain from crude oil contaminated land in southern Iran.…”
Section: Detoxification Of Heavy Metalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several approaches was developed for the treatment of vanadium-containing waste water like electrochemical treatment, precipitation, ion exchange, evaporation, reverse osmosis, adsorption on activated coal and later biological treatment (Mack et al 2007;Gadd 2009;Chojnacka 2010). Among these techniques, biological treatment (biosorption or bioaccumulation) is one of the common and cost-effective method to recover or eliminate vanadium and heavy metal ions from waste water treatment (Ghazvini and Mashkani 2009;Ueki 2016). Due to highest ability of ascidian to accumulate vanadium, several researchers also used solitary ascidian animal to remediate vanadium and other heavy metal toxicities from water environment (Jaffar et al 2015).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%