AI summary

90% confidence

MES research in energy, microbial. Chemical pollution threatens human health and ecosystem sustainability. Persiste...

Generated by MESSAI extraction pipeline · review against source PDF

Extraction

Reported parameters

No extracted parameters yet — request AI extraction to compare this paper against literature distributions.

No 3D model is mapped to this paper yet. Parameter ranges above still place reported values on the literature distribution.

What they did

System
MERC

What worked

No outcome metrics extracted yet.

Abstract

Chemical pollution threatens human health and ecosystem sustainability. Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) like per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are expensive to clean up once emitted. Innovative and synergistic strategies are urgently needed, yet process integration and cost-effectiveness remain challenging. An in-situ PFAS remediation system is developed to employ a plant-derived biomimetic nano-framework to achieve highly efficient adsorption and subsequent fungal biotransformation synergistically. The multiple component framework is presented as Renewable Artificial Plant for In-situ Microbial Environmental Remediation (RAPIMER). RAPIMER exhibits high adsorption capacity for the PFAS compounds and diverse adsorption capability toward co-contaminants. Subsequently, RAPIMER provides the substrates and contaminants for in situ bioremediation via fungus Irpex lacteus and promotes PFAS detoxification. RAPIMER arises from cheap lignocellulosic sources, enabling a broader impact on sustainability and a means for low-cost pollutant remediation. Persistent organic pollutant (POP) remediation is important for protecting the environment and human health but can be expensive. Here, the authors report on the creation of a plant-based remediation material which can absorb high levels of POPs and then provide the nutrients needed for fungal degradation and detoxification.

Keywords

Environmental remediationNano-NanotechnologyBiochemical engineering

Identifiers

Journal
Nature Communications
Year
2022