## Abstract **BACKGROUND:** Several studies have demonstrated the feasibility of treating aqueous phenols and aromatic amines with oxidoreductases in synthetic wastewater samples. However, little work has been done on the effectiveness of enzymatic treatment on real wastewater. Here a comparison wa
Removal of aqueous phenol and 2-chlorophenol with purified soybean peroxidase and raw soybean hulls
✍ Scribed by Colin Flock; Amarjeet Bassi; Mark Gijzen
- Book ID
- 101264703
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 166 KB
- Volume
- 74
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0268-2575
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✦ Synopsis
In this study, the removal of phenol and 2-chlorophenol using soybean seed-hulls in the presence of hydrogen peroxide is demonstrated. The performance of a stirred membrane reactor containing soluble puriüed SBP was compared with a batch stirred reactor containing raw soybean seed-hulls. The puriüed enzyme reactor proved to be ineþ ective while excellent results were obtained with the crude seed-hulls for the removal of phenol and 2-chlorophenol. Four sequential batch reactors containing raw seed-hulls achieved greater than 96% removal of phenol with a retention time of 20 min in each reactor. A single batch reactor containing raw seed-hulls was eþ ective in removing greater than 98.5% of 2-chlorophenol (initially at 1000 ppm) in less than 15 min. The performance of these reactors is comparable to existing HRP-based technology. The stability of the soybean peroxidase (SBP) enzyme was also examined in the presence of detergents (SDS, Tween 20 and Triton X-100). Low concentrations of the detergents signiücantly increased the enzyme activity and higher concentrations of detergents (up to 20% w/v) did not inactivate the SBP enzyme. These results demonstrate that SBP has good potential for the treatment of phenol contaminated solutions.
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