Green synergy: advancements in biosurfactant-assisted microbial remediation and formulation strategies for explosive-contaminated soils.
Sharma A, Arora H, Dubey S, Gupta DK
Soil Health
Explosive residues from military sites and old industrial areas quietly leach into groundwater and soils where food is grown, and this greener cleanup approach could help restore contaminated land near communities and farms.
Some soils — especially near old military bases or industrial sites — are heavily polluted with leftover explosive chemicals like TNT that are toxic and very hard to remove. Scientists are studying how certain natural, soap-like substances produced by microbes can help other microbes digest and destroy these poisons more effectively. New delivery methods, like tiny capsules that slowly release these helpful microbes into the soil, are making this natural cleanup approach more practical for real-world use.
Key Findings
Biosurfactants such as rhamnolipids significantly increase the bioavailability of explosive pollutants (TNT, RDX, HMX) in soil, making them more accessible to degrading microbes.
Advanced formulation strategies — including co-delivery systems and encapsulation technologies — improve the field performance and stability of microbial remediation agents.
Multi-omics tools and designed microbial consortia (teams of microbes) are emerging as powerful approaches to engineer more efficient explosive-degrading communities.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers review how naturally produced soap-like compounds from microbes (biosurfactants) can team up with bacteria to clean up soils contaminated by military explosives like TNT, making the toxic chemicals more accessible and easier to break down.
Abstract Preview
Widespread use of nitro-aromatic and nitramine explosives such as 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene, hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine, and octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocane has caused per...
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