Constraints on CaCO precipitation in superabsorbent polymer by aerobic bacteria.

Constraints on CaCO precipitation in superabsorbent polymer by aerobic bacteria.

Nielsen, Søren Dollerup;Koren, Klaus;Löbmann, Korbinian;Hinge, Mogens;Scoma, Alberto;Kjeldsen, Kasper Urup;Røy, Hans;
Applied microbiology and biotechnology 2020 Vol. 104 pp. 365-375
221
nielsen2020constraintsapplied

Abstract

Microbially induced CaCO precipitation (MICP) can give concrete self-healing properties. MICP agents are typically bacterial endospores which are coated into shelled granules, infused into expanded clay, or embedded into superabsorbent polymer (SAP). When small cracks appear in the cured concrete, the encapsulation is broken and the metabolic CO production from the germinated bacteria causes healing of the cracks by precipitation of CaCO. Such systems are being tested empirically at large scales, but survival of endospores through preparation and application, as well as germination and growth kinetics of the germinated vegetative cells, remains poorly resolved. We encapsulated endospores of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus alkalinitrilicus in crosslinked acrylamide-based SAP and quantified their germination, growth, and, in the case of B. alkalinitrilicus, CaCO precipitation potential. The endospores survived crosslinking and desiccation inside the polymer matrix. Microcalorimetry and microscopy showed that ~ 80% of the encapsulated endospores of both strains readily germinated after rehydration of freeze-dried SAP. Germinated cells grew into dense colonies of cells inside the SAP, and those of B. alkalinitrilicus calcified with up to 0.3 g CaCO produced per g desiccated SAP when incubated aerobically. Measurements by planar optodes indicated that the precipitation rates were inherently oxygen limited due to diffusional constraints, rather than limited by electron donor or Ca availability. Such oxygen limitation will limit MICP in all water-saturated and oxygen-dependent systems, and MICP agents based on anaerobic bacteria, e.g., nitrate reducers, should be developed to broaden the applicability of bioactive self-healing concretes to wet and waterlogged environments.

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81717
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10.1007/s00253-019-10215-4
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