Uranium mining and processing for nuclear weapons and fuel have left thousands of sites with toxic levels of this actinide in soil and ground water. An emerging strategy for remediating such environments involves using organic carbon to promote microbially-mediated reduction and precipitation of insoluble U(IV) minerals. Although previous U bioreduction studies have shown promising results, they were of short duration (up to a few months). Our longer-term (20 months) laboratory study using historically contaminated sediment has alarmingly shown that microbial reduction of U was transient even under reducing (methanogenic) conditions. Uranium was reductively immobilized during the first 100 days, but later (150 to 600 days) reoxidized and mo...
Subsurface reduction of U(VI) can be mediated by microorganisms and their redox-active mineral bypr...
AbstractThe stimulation of microbial U(VI) reduction to precipitate insoluble U(IV) has been propose...
International audienceUranium bioremediation strategies focus on the addition of a reduce...
Bioreduction of U in contaminated sediments is an attractive strategy because of its low cost, and b...
Remediation of uranium (U) contaminated sediments through in-situ stimulation of bioreduction to ins...
Uraninite (UO2) is the most desirable end product of in situ bioreduction because of its low solubil...
Bioreduction-based strategies for remediating uranium (U)-contaminated sediments face the challenge ...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for U-contam...
Stimulating the microbial reduction of aqueous uranium(VI) to insoluble U(IV) via electron donor a...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for U-contam...
AbstractMicrobial metabolism has the potential to alter the solubility of a broad range of priority ...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for U-contam...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for uranium ...
Stimulation of U(VI) bioreduction is becoming an attractive in-situ method for stabilizing U in cont...
Reductive immobilization of uranium has been explored as a remediation strategy for the U-contaminat...
Subsurface reduction of U(VI) can be mediated by microorganisms and their redox-active mineral bypr...
AbstractThe stimulation of microbial U(VI) reduction to precipitate insoluble U(IV) has been propose...
International audienceUranium bioremediation strategies focus on the addition of a reduce...
Bioreduction of U in contaminated sediments is an attractive strategy because of its low cost, and b...
Remediation of uranium (U) contaminated sediments through in-situ stimulation of bioreduction to ins...
Uraninite (UO2) is the most desirable end product of in situ bioreduction because of its low solubil...
Bioreduction-based strategies for remediating uranium (U)-contaminated sediments face the challenge ...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for U-contam...
Stimulating the microbial reduction of aqueous uranium(VI) to insoluble U(IV) via electron donor a...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for U-contam...
AbstractMicrobial metabolism has the potential to alter the solubility of a broad range of priority ...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for U-contam...
Reductive biostimulation is currently being explored as a possible remediation strategy for uranium ...
Stimulation of U(VI) bioreduction is becoming an attractive in-situ method for stabilizing U in cont...
Reductive immobilization of uranium has been explored as a remediation strategy for the U-contaminat...
Subsurface reduction of U(VI) can be mediated by microorganisms and their redox-active mineral bypr...
AbstractThe stimulation of microbial U(VI) reduction to precipitate insoluble U(IV) has been propose...
International audienceUranium bioremediation strategies focus on the addition of a reduce...