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Aerobic and anaerobic biotreatment of olive oil mill waste water. (c2006)

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dc.creator Mhanna, Elias Youssef en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2011-11-14T09:50:38Z
dc.date.available 2011-11-14T09:50:38Z
dc.date.datecopyrighted 2006 en_US
dc.date.issued 2011-11-14
dc.date.submitted 2006-02-13
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10725/983
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 66-78). en_US
dc.description.abstract Olive oil Mill Wastewater (OMW) or Zibar is one of the two by-products obtained during olive oil extraction. OMW represents a serious environmental pollution problem especially for underground and surface water. Aerobic and anaerobic OMW biotreatment processes were developed and improved at the LAU Biotechnology Labs and showed great success. A bacterial mixture of ten strains (Aquaspirillum dispar, Bacillus cereus/thuringiensis, Brevibacterium otitidis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Proteus penneri/ vulgaris, Pseudomonas fluorescence biotype F, Pseudomonas marginalis, Pseudomonas mendonica, Pseudomonas sp. , and Pseudomonas viridilivida) and five yeast cultures (Candida boidini, Candida memodendra, Candida mogii, Pichia haplophia, and Sacharomyces ludwigii) were isolated from OMW, purified and reused in OMW aerobic biotreatment. After four days of aerobic small lab scale fermentation, a 68.9 % of BOD and a 67.8 % of COD reduction was achieved. A 69.3 % of BOD and a 68.4 % COD reduction was obtained during eight days of intermediate scale biotreatment. After fourteen days of pilot scale biotreatment, a 69.1 % reduction was recorded in BOD values and a 68.2 % reduction in COD values. Finally, a 71.0 % BOD and a 63.9 % COD reduction was observed after thirty-one days of industrial scale biotreatment. Anaerobic OMW experimental lab scale biotreatment using omasomal juice as experimental inoculum culture achieved a reduction of 67.8 % BOD and 66.6 % COD with 6.1 I of methane production after six weeks of incubation Combining aerobic OMW biotreatment with anaerobic treatment, 74.3 % of BOD and 73.2 % of COD reduction were reached. Above mentioned OMW biotreatment processes, developed at LAD Biotechnology Labs, achieved acceptable BOD and COD reduction rates, are low cost and suitable to be applied in small rural olive mills in Lebanon and in the Middle East. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Olive oil en_US
dc.subject Olive oil -- Analysis en_US
dc.subject Factory and trade waste en_US
dc.subject Olive oil mills -- Lebanon en_US
dc.title Aerobic and anaerobic biotreatment of olive oil mill waste water. (c2006) en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US
dc.date.term Fall en_US
dc.creator.school Arts and Sciences en_US
dc.creator.birthdate 1976-06-19
dc.creator.identifier 199735140 en_US
dc.creator.co-members Dr. Costantine Daher en_US
dc.creator.co-members Dr. Sima Tokajian en_US
dc.author.woa OA en_US
dc.creator.department MS in Molecular Biology en_US
dc.description.physdesc 1 bound copy: 1 v. (various pagings); ill. (some col.); 30 cm. Available at RNL. en_US
dc.author.division Biology en_US
dc.creator.advisor Dr. Fuad Hashwa en_US
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.26756/th.2006.60


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