The illegal disposal of waste from textile industries having recalcitrant pollutants is a worldwide problem with more severity in developing nations. We used an ecofriendly method to synthesize silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) from a locally-isolated bacterial strain Bacillus marisflavi TEZ7 and employed them as photocatalysts to degrade not only synthetic azo dyes but also actual textile effluents followed by phytotoxicity evaluation and identification of degradation molecules. The strain TEZ7 was taxonomically identified through the 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. Biogenic AgNPs were characterized for stabilizing molecules, crystal structure, size, shape and elemental composition by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), respectively. The photocatalytic degradation efficiency of biogenic AgNPs for three azo dyes such as Direct Blue-1, Methyl Red, and Reactive Black-5 ranged between 54.14 and 96.92% after 5 h of sunlight exposure at a concentration of 100 mg/L. Moreover, the actual wastewater treatment analysis revealed that the 100 mg/L dose of AgNPs significantly decreased the concentration of various physico-chemical parameters of textile effluents such as pH, EC, chlorides, sulphates, hardness, BOD, COD, TSS and TDS. Furthermore, six intermediate molecules of methyl red degradation were identified by LC-MS and it was established by a pot study that these degradation molecules have no phytotoxic effects on rice plants. It was concluded that the AgNPs can be used as an efficient and low-cost strategy for the degradation of azo dyes containing textile wastewaters.
Keywords: Azo dyes; Bacillus sp.; Industrial effluents; Nanotechnology; Silver nanoparticles.
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