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Featured researches published by Seong Heon Kim.


Separation Science and Technology | 2008

Removal of nitrate from water by adsorption onto zinc chloride treated activated carbon

Amit Bhatnagar; Min-Kyu Ji; Yang Hun Choi; Woosik Jung; Sang-Hun Lee; Sun Joon Kim; Heejun Suk; Hyoung-Soo Kim; Booki Min; Seong Heon Kim; Byong-Hun Jeon; Joon Wun Kang

Abstract Adsorption study with untreated and zinc chloride (ZnCl2) treated coconut granular activated carbon (GAC) for nitrate removal from water has been carried out. Untreated coconut GAC was treated with ZnCl2 and carbonized. The optimal conditions were selected by studying the influence of process variables such as chemical ratio and activation temperature. Experimental results reveal that chemical weight ratio of 200% and temperature of 500°C was found to be optimum for the maximum removal of nitrate from water. Both untreated and ZnCl2 treated coconut GACs were characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Brunauer Emmett Teller (BET) N2‐gas adsorption, surface area and Energy Dispersive X‐Ray (EDX) analysis. The comparison between untreated and ZnCl2 treated GAC indicates that treatment with ZnCl2 has significantly improved the adsorption efficacy of untreated GAC. The adsorption capacity of untreated and ZnCl2 treated coconut GACs were found 1.7 and 10.2 mg/g, respectively. The adsorption of nitrate on ZnCl2 treated coconut GAC was studied as a function of contact time, initial concentration of nitrate anion, temperature, and pH by batch mode adsorption experiments. The kinetic study reveals that equilibrium was achieved within one hour. The adsorption data conform best fit to the Langmuir isotherm. Kinetic study results reveal that present adsorption system followed a pseudo‐second‐order kinetics with pore‐diffusion‐controlled. Results of the present study recommend that the adsorption process using ZnCl2 treated coconut GAC might be a promising innovative technology in future for nitrates removal from drinking water.


Environmental Technology | 2014

The effects of salinity on the growth and biochemical properties of Chlamydomonas mexicana GU732420 cultivated in municipal wastewater.

El Sayed Salama; Reda A.I. Abou-Shanab; Jung Rae Kim; Sangho Lee; Seong Heon Kim; Sang-Eun Oh; Hyun-Chul Kim; Hyun Seog Roh; Byong-Hun Jeon

A freshwater microalga Chlamydomonas mexicana was grown on municipal wastewater with different levels of salinity up to 400 mmol/L NaCl, and the biochemical properties were characterized after 10 days of cultivation. C. mexicana showed the higher specific growth rates for 100 and 200 mmol/L NaCl. Nitrogen was completely removed within 10 days as a result of algal growth promoted by the addition of 200–400 mmol/L NaCl. Phosphorus removal increased from 77–84% as the concentration of NaCl increased from 100 to 400 mmol/L. The highest removal of total inorganic carbon (66%) was obtained with the addition of 200 mmol/L NaCl. The lipid content increased from 17% to 38% as the concentration of NaCl increased from 0 to 400 mmol/L. The total fatty acid content and glycerol yield of C. mexicana increased 1.8- and 4-fold in wastewater amended with NaCl, respectively. Fatty acids accumulated in the algal biomass were mainly composed of palmitic (27–29%), γ-linolenic (27–30%), and linolelaidic acids (16–18%). The optimal condition for fatty acids production in C. mexicana was observed when the municipal wastewater was amended with 100–200 mmol/L NaCl with a simultaneous removal of nutrients.


Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy | 2013

Municipal wastewater utilization for biomass and biodiesel production by Scenedesmus obliquus HM103382 and Micractinium reisseri JN169781

Reda A.I. Abou-Shanab; Seong Heon Kim; Min Kyu Ji; Sang-Hun Lee; Hyun Seog Roh; Byong-Hun Jeon

Municipal wastewater is a major problem due to its high concentration of nutrients, which can cause eutrophication of the surrounding water, resulting in serious disturbance in health and ecosystem. Microalgae can utilize nitrogen and phosphorus in wastewater as a potential source of cost effective and sustainable means for biodiesel production. Two microalgal species including Scenedesmus obliquus HM103382 and Micractinium reisseri JN169781 were cultivated in domestic wastewater (influent and effluent) that was pretreated and supplemented with 15% CO2 in order to accomplish simultaneous nutrient removal and lipid production from wastewater. The biomass yield and lipid production were relatively high using either autoclaved or filter-sterilized wastewater compared to using either UV-irradiated or unsterilized wastewater (control). M. reisseri and S. obliquus grown in the autoclaved influent showed high biomass yield (0.41 ± 0.01 and 0.26 ± 0.03 g dry wt. l−1) and lipid content (22% and 19%), respectively....


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017

Degradation of crude oil in a contaminated tidal flat area and the resilience of bacterial community

Jaejin Lee; Il Han; Bo Ram Kang; Seong Heon Kim; Woo Jun Sul; Tae Kwon Lee

Crude oil spills, Hebei Spirit in South Korea, is considered as one of the worst environmental disasters of the region. Our understanding on activation of oil-degrading bacteria and resilience of microbial community in oil contaminated sites are limited due to scarcity of such event. In the present study, tidal flat sediment contaminated by the oil spill were investigated for duration of 13months to identify temporal change in microbial community and functional genes responsible for PAH-degradation. The results showed predominance of previously known oil-degrading genera, such as Cycloclasticus, Alcanivorax, and Thalassolituus, displaying significant increase within first four months of the accident. The disturbance caused by the oil spill altered the microbial community and its functional structures, but they were almost restored to the original state after 13months. Present study demonstrated high detoxification capacity of indigenous bacterial populations in the tidal flat sediments and its resilience of microbial community.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2017

Short-term Effects of Great Cormorant Droppings on Water Quality and Microbial Community of an Artificial Agricultural Reservoir

Il Han; Keunje Yoo; Gui Nam Wee; Jee Hyun No; Jung Won Park; So Jin Min; Seong Heon Kim; Tae Kwon Leea

Agricultural reservoirs are established to improve the management of water resources. Waterbirds in protected waters have become a nuisance, however, as nutrients from fecal deposits transported by the waterbirds have served to severely deteriorate water quality. Despite the importance of clean water resources, the microecology of small agricultural reservoirs regularly colonized by transitory waterbirds are seldom reviewed. To improve our understanding of the influence of waterbirds on small bodies of water, a microcosm study was conducted using water and sediment from an agricultural reservoir inhabited by 300 to 500 great cormorants. Temporal changes in total nitrogen, total phosphorous, chemical oxygen demand, NH-N, PO-P, and chlorophyll-a concentrations, in addition to the microbial community, were evaluated for microcosms containing 0, 0.5, 1.0, and 5.0 g of feces collected from a great cormorant colony. Chemical analysis of the water microcosm revealed that all microcosms showed both immediate and prolonged increases in nutrients due to the addition of feces. Additionally, a mere 0.5 g of feces doubled the concentration of chlorophyll-a from 2.1 ± 0.99 to 5.2 ± 1.1 μg L within 1 mo. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling of the microbial community structure revealed disturbances in both water and sediment microcosms. Disturbances to the microbial community in the water microcosm were significant only when 5.0 g of feces was added; however, disturbances to sediment microbial communities were induced by a smaller mass of feces. These results confirm the short-term water quality impairment and shift in microbial community structure caused by waterbird droppings and bird colony surface runoff in an agricultural reservoir.


Ecological Engineering | 2013

Cultivation of microalgae species in tertiary municipal wastewater supplemented with CO2 for nutrient removal and biomass production

Min Kyu Ji; Reda A.I. Abou-Shanab; Seong Heon Kim; El Sayed Salama; Sang-Hun Lee; Akhil N. Kabra; Youn Suk Lee; Sungwoo Hong; Byong-Hun Jeon


Bioprocess and Biosystems Engineering | 2013

Biomass, lipid content, and fatty acid composition of freshwater Chlamydomonas mexicana and Scenedesmus obliquus grown under salt stress

El Sayed Salama; Hyun-Chul Kim; Reda A.I. Abou-Shanab; Min Kyu Ji; You Kwan Oh; Seong Heon Kim; Byong-Hun Jeon


Chemical Engineering Journal | 2008

Vanadium removal from water by waste metal sludge and cement immobilization

Amit Bhatnagar; A.K. Minocha; Deepak Pudasainee; Hyung Keun Chung; Seong Heon Kim; Hyoung-Soo Kim; Booki Min; Byong-Hun Jeon


Chemosphere | 2008

Dechlorination and destruction of PCDDs/PCDFs in fly ashes from municipal solid waste incinerators by low temperature thermal treatment.

Geum-Ju Song; Seong Heon Kim; Yong-Chil Seo; Sam-Cwan Kim


Fresenius Environmental Bulletin | 2007

Removal of some metal ions from water by battery industry waste and its cement fixation

Amit Bhatnagar; A.K. Minocha; Seong Heon Kim; Byong-Hun Jeon

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Amit Bhatnagar

University of Eastern Finland

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