Publicación: Diseño de un sistema de biofiltración para la remoción de estireno
Portada
Citas bibliográficas
Código QR
LA Referencia Stats
Autor corporativo
Recolector de datos
Otros/Desconocido
Director audiovisual
Editor/Compilador
Editores
Tipo de Material
Fecha
Cita bibliográfica
Título de serie/ reporte/ volumen/ colección
Es Parte de
Resumen en español
This work was focused on developing an elimination process of styrene, an organic compound generating complex odors in air, through the design and construction of a biofiltration system, utilizing bacteria of the Pseudomona aeruginosa and Escherichia coli types stuck on a pumice stone support. Air was contaminated with styrene, in concentrations above the American Standard (TLV 40 ppm, ACGIH Worldwide, 2002), to simulate a hazardous work environment to the human health. To evaluate the efficiency of the system, the contaminated inlet air as well as the outlet flow were analyzed by taking direct styrene concentrations measurements with an organic vapor meter. Initially, the results obtained from the styrene degradation were above 55%, for a five-daily-sampling average during 10 days. This percentage was a consequence of the progressive stabilization process of the system within the first days, so the removal was low. However, average removals above 70% and punctual removals above 90% were reached after the eighth day. The pumice stone support demonstrated to be a good alternative to improve biofilm formation; the rapid micropore saturation guaranteed low adsorption of the organic compound and confirmed the elimination of styrene via biodegradation.