Author:
,SAVIĆ S.,PETROVIĆ S., ,MITROVIC J., ,GLISIC S., ,BARBINTA-PATRASCU M.-E.,
Abstract
This study underlines the idea of valorizing vegetable waste in a
“green” approach for water bioremediation. In this research, the possibility of using
unpurified peroxidase obtained from cabbage leaf waste in the process of removing
phenol from aqueous solutions was examined. This biocatalyst exhibits catalytic
activity in a wide range of temperatures, pH values, and pollutant concentrations. The
efficiency of phenol removal was monitored spectrophotometrically, by measuring the
change in the residual amount of phenol in the reaction mixture. The influence of
peroxidase, phenol, hydrogen peroxide, and polyethylene glycol (PEG) concentrations,
as well as incubation time, temperature, pH value, and shaking rate on the efficiency of
the phenol removal process, was comprehensively evaluated. The results showed that
the use of raw, unpurified peroxidase from cabbage leaf waste can successfully replace
commercial peroxidase and thereby significantly reduce the procedure cost. In addition,
the presence of PEG as a peroxidase stabilizer showed little effect on the phenol
removal efficiency, indicating that the extracted crude peroxidase is stable even without
a commercial stabilizer, which could further cheapen the phenol removal process.
Reference34 articles.
1. "1. K. Obaideen, N. Shehata, E. T. Sayed, M. A. Abdelkareem, M. S. Mahmoud, and A. G. Olabi, Energy Nexus 7, 100112 (2022).
2. 2. E. Ayranci and O. Duman, Journal of Hazardous Materials 124, 125−132 (2005).
3. 3. S. Zuzana, D. Katarína, and T. Lívia, World Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology 25, 243−252 (2009).
4. 4. M. Stanisavljević and L. Nedić, Facta universitatis - Series: Working and Living Environmental Protection 2, 345−349 (2004).
5. 5. K. Sellami, A. Couvert, N. Nasrallah, R. Maachi, N. Tandjaoui, M. Abouseoud, and A. Amrane, Journal of Hazardous Materials 403, 124021 (2021).