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Use of bacterial isolates in the treatment of textile dye wastewater: A review

Senelisile Moyo, Bukisile P. Makhanya, Pinkie E. Zwane

2022Heliyon148 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The textile industry uses large amounts of dyes like reactive, azo, anthraquinone, and triphenylmethane to colour textiles. Dyes that are not used up during the colouration process usually end up in water bodies as waste leading to the pollution of the water bodies. This makes the industry to be one of the major contributors to water pollution in the world. Bacterial agents isolated from various sources like dye contaminated soil and textile wastewater have shown to have the ability to effectively decolourise and degrade these dye pollutants leading to improved water quality. This review discusses bacterial isolates that have been used successfully to degrade and decolourise textile dyes, their mode of dye removal as well as the factors that affect their dye degradation ability. It further looks at the latest wastewater treatment technologies that incorporate bacterial microorganisms to treat dye wastewater.

Topics & Concepts

WastewaterTextileTextile industryPulp and paper industryPollutantWaste managementSewage treatmentAnthraquinoneEnvironmental sciencePollutionChemistryEnvironmental engineeringMaterials scienceEngineeringBiologyEcologyOrganic chemistryComposite materialArchaeologyHistoryEnzyme-mediated dye degradationDye analysis and toxicityChromium effects and bioremediation
Use of bacterial isolates in the treatment of textile dye wastewater: A review | Litcius