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Engineered Bacterial Bioleaching for Sustainable Metal Recovery and E-Waste Biodegradation

Srishti Singh ChauhanKalinga University,Department of Biotechnology,Raipur,IndiaR. PadmavathyNurullaeva Ugulkhon ErgashboyevnaTuran International University,Faculty of Humanities & Pedagogy,Namangan,UzbekistanHaeedir MohameedIslamic University of Najaf,College of Technical Engineering,Department of Computer Techniques Engineering,Najaf,IraqE. ArunkumarKarpagam College of Engineering,Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering,CoimbatoreThella Preethi PriyankaSaveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences,Saveetha School of Engineering,Department of Computer Science and Engineering,Chennai,Tamil Nadu,IndiaRaykhon RasulovaChirchik State Pedagogical University,Tashkent,UzbekistanChinmai ShettyNitte (Deemed to be University), NMAM Institute of Technology (NMAMIT),Department of Information Science and Engineering,Nitte,India
2025
ABI

Annotatsiya

Electronic waste (e-waste) is turning out to be the most urgent issue of the 21 st century, as its increasing manufacture causes toxic components to enter the ecosystem, such as heavy metals and other dangerous elements. It is important to note that it also has other precious metals like gold, silver as well as palladium that is usually not adequately extracted because of the ineffective methods of extraction. The conventional recycling techniques, i.e. chemical leaching and mechanical separation, are energy consuming and are also very dangerous to the environment considering that they are not capable of extracting all the metals thus ecologically polluting the environment thus increasing the situation of scarcity. This paper proposes the development of an engineered bacterial bioleaching system, BioReclaim-X, of metal-resistant and polymer-degrading microbial consortia to recover metals in an ecologically friendly, biosustainable way and degrade e-waste using microbial processes as possible solutions to such challenges. Specifically, precious metals were dissolved to recoverable ions in Cupriavidus metallidurans and Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans, and the enzymatic dismantling of polymeric elements in Pseudomonas putida. Optimised bioreactor systems where high ph, temperature, and agitation rate were used were conducted to perform bioleaching to maximise metal recovery, and to minimise the formation of toxic byproducts. Gold, silver and palladium were experimentally shown to be retrieved with efficiencies of 92, 88 and 85 respectively and synthetic resins were shown to be degraded with 78 percent. A relative comparison has found that this bio-based process requires a total of 30 percent less energy and has 40 percent less harm to the environment than conventional recycling. It may be a potential competitor because it is a more environmentally friendly retro-compatible economic conversion policy. The methodology will be able to deal with the environmental and health impacts of e-waste dumping and encourage the practice of resource recovery that is eco-friendly. These findings indicate that engineered bacteria bioleaching may be considered a viable, scalable and sustainable process that can replace the existing system of ewaste management. Genetic engineering, optimisation of operations with the help of AI, and the implementation of bioreactors in large volumes can be used in the future to maximise the attainable results, promote further efficiency, generalisability, and socio-environmental benefits of the practice.

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