Influence of heterotrophic microbial growth on biological oxidation of pyrite.
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The rate and extent of pyrite oxidation by the iron-oxidizing bacteria Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans was limited by the growth of the heterotrophic microbe Acidiphilium acidophilum. In batch systems containing a mixture of both organisms, the maximum zero-order rate of ferric iron accumulation was about 1.4 mg of Fe3+ L(-1) d(-1) as compared to 9.4 mg of Fe3+ L(-1) d(-1) for pure cultures of A. ferrooxidans under the same conditions. Pyrite oxidation was limited in cases where both cultures of organisms were initially present as well as situations where the heterotrophic organisms were added to established, pyrite-oxidizing systems containing A. ferrooxidans. Results also indicated that organic carbon remaining in solution following heterotrophic bacterial growth reduced the rate of abiotic pyrite oxidation by the ferric ion. Furthermore, a cell-free solution of the residual organic carbon resulted in a lag of A. ferrooxidans growth in soluble ferrous medium. The residual organic carbon solution that accumulated during the growth of Aph. acidophilum had a diverse molecular weight distribution, indicating that different compounds could be responsible for the inhibition of chemical pyrite oxidation and the A. ferrooxidans growth lag observed. Titration of dissolved copper ions with residual dissolved organic carbon originating from Aph. acidophilum cultures indicated that a metal complexation mechanism could be responsible for the lower rates of pyrite oxidation observed. These data suggest that encouraging the growth of heterotrophic microorganisms under acid mine drainage conditions may be a feasible strategy for decreasing both the rate and the extent of sulfide mineral oxidation.
[1] V. Evangelou. Pyrite oxidation and its control , 1995 .