Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Towards a monitoring tool to quantify urease during biocementation treatment at microscale
View through CrossRef
Biocementation consists in using urease enzyme and a solution rich in urea and in calcium to precipitate calcium carbonate (biocement). When applying this treatment in soils, the biocement minerals bond the grains improving overall soil’s hydro-mechanical properties. For the practical use of this technique, it is necessary to be able to predict the properties of the treated soil after following specific protocols, by preference avoiding non-destructive testing such as those performed on samples extracted after the treatment. The amount of biocement precipitated depends on the amount of urease enzyme, urea and calcium. This idea has inspired the development of one magnetoresistive biosensor to detect urease, to be used as a non-destructive monitoring tool during the treatment. A magnetoresistive platform was used to quantify the signal, which is related to the urease concentration through a calibration curve. The sensor was tested to measure the enzyme present in the inflow and outflow fluids used to treat cylindrical soil samples (2.5 cm diameter and 2.0 cm height), prepared with a uniform grading size sand (D50=0.3 mm). Purified urease from Canavalia ensiformis, was used. The improvement of the biocemented sand samples was quantified through measuring the calcium carbonate content of the soil after the treatment and the values were related with the amount of enzyme retained by the soil, determined using the sensor readings. This work found, for the first time, the relationship between the measured concentration of urease retained by soil and the calcium carbonate content precipitated. This relationship is an important tool for monitoring the treatment, without the need to use destructive tests or even stop the treatment.
Title: Towards a monitoring tool to quantify urease during biocementation treatment at microscale
Description:
Biocementation consists in using urease enzyme and a solution rich in urea and in calcium to precipitate calcium carbonate (biocement).
When applying this treatment in soils, the biocement minerals bond the grains improving overall soil’s hydro-mechanical properties.
For the practical use of this technique, it is necessary to be able to predict the properties of the treated soil after following specific protocols, by preference avoiding non-destructive testing such as those performed on samples extracted after the treatment.
The amount of biocement precipitated depends on the amount of urease enzyme, urea and calcium.
This idea has inspired the development of one magnetoresistive biosensor to detect urease, to be used as a non-destructive monitoring tool during the treatment.
A magnetoresistive platform was used to quantify the signal, which is related to the urease concentration through a calibration curve.
The sensor was tested to measure the enzyme present in the inflow and outflow fluids used to treat cylindrical soil samples (2.
5 cm diameter and 2.
0 cm height), prepared with a uniform grading size sand (D50=0.
3 mm).
Purified urease from Canavalia ensiformis, was used.
The improvement of the biocemented sand samples was quantified through measuring the calcium carbonate content of the soil after the treatment and the values were related with the amount of enzyme retained by the soil, determined using the sensor readings.
This work found, for the first time, the relationship between the measured concentration of urease retained by soil and the calcium carbonate content precipitated.
This relationship is an important tool for monitoring the treatment, without the need to use destructive tests or even stop the treatment.
Related Results
A novel urease gene structure of Sporosarcina pasteurii with double operons
A novel urease gene structure of Sporosarcina pasteurii with double operons
Abstract
Sporosarcina pasteurii(S. pasteurii) is a soil-derived Gram-positive bacterium that has been used to develop a variety of application scenarios using its efficient...
Optimising tool wear and workpiece condition monitoring via cyber-physical systems for smart manufacturing
Optimising tool wear and workpiece condition monitoring via cyber-physical systems for smart manufacturing
Smart manufacturing has been developed since the introduction of Industry 4.0. It consists of resource sharing and networking, predictive engineering, and material and data analyti...
Soil urease inhibition by various plant extracts
Soil urease inhibition by various plant extracts
Urea is the most popular and widely used nitrogenous fertilizer. High soil urease activity rapidly hydrolyses applied urea to ammonia which contributes to soil nitrogen (N) losses ...
Kinetics and Mechanism Study of Competitive Inhibition of Jack‐Bean Urease by Baicalin
Kinetics and Mechanism Study of Competitive Inhibition of Jack‐Bean Urease by Baicalin
Baicalin (BA) is the principal component of Radix Scutellariae responsible for its pharmacological activity. In this study, kinetics and mechanism of inhibition by BA against jack‐...
CagA , VacA and urease can assist in predicting the development trend of chronic gastritis
CagA , VacA and urease can assist in predicting the development trend of chronic gastritis
Abstract
Background
The virulence factors about CagA and VacA of Helicobacter pylori are thought to induce more serious gastric disorders and histological alterations, whi...
Robot tool use: A survey
Robot tool use: A survey
Using human tools can significantly benefit robots in many application domains. Such ability would allow robots to solve problems that they were unable to without tools. However, r...
The Non-Identity of Jack Bean Agglutinin with Crystalline Urease
The Non-Identity of Jack Bean Agglutinin with Crystalline Urease
Abstract
Hotchkiss and Tauber (1) have stated that crystalline urease agglutinates washed rabbit and mouse erythrocytes, but not those of sheep. As little as 0.00014...
Antioxidant and anti-Helicobacter pylori activities of Hericium erinaceus mycelium and culture filtrate
Antioxidant and anti-Helicobacter pylori activities of Hericium erinaceus mycelium and culture filtrate
Introduction: Hericium erinaceus is known as a medicinal edible mushroom owing to its antimicrobial, antioxidant, anti-tumor and immunomodulatory effects. Helicobacter pylori infec...


