Advancements in Composting Technologies for Efficient Soil Remediation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Mini Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. PAHs’ Characteristics and Source
3. Identification and Fate of PAHs in the Environment
3.1. PAHs in Soil
3.2. PAHs in Food
3.3. PAHs in Sediment
4. Composting
4.1. Bioremediation of PAHs by Composting
4.2. Factors Affecting Composting
4.2.1. Temperature
4.2.2. Oxygen Supply
4.2.3. Moisture Content
4.2.4. Nutrient Availability
4.2.5. pH Level
4.2.6. Physicochemical Properties
4.2.7. Microbial Community
4.2.8. Bioaugmentation
5. Challenges Faced by Composting
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PAH Name | Molecular Formula | Number of Rings | Common Sources | Toxicity and Concerns |
---|---|---|---|---|
Naphthalene | C10H8 | 2 | Mothballs, cigarette smoke, fossil fuels | Possible human carcinogen, respiratory irritant |
Acenaphthylene | C12H8 | 3 | Incomplete combustion, vehicle exhaust | Toxic to aquatic organisms |
Acenaphthene | C12H10 | 3 | Coal tar, wood preservatives | Possible skin and eye irritants |
Fluorene | C13H10 | 3 | Coal tar, vehicle emissions | Can bioaccumulate in organisms |
Phenanthrene | C14H10 | 3 | Crude oil, coal combustion | Potentially harmful to aquatic life |
Anthracene | C14H10 | 3 | Wood combustion, coal tar | Low acute toxicity but can cause skin irritation |
Fluoranthene | C16H10 | 4 | Vehicle exhaust, industrial emissions | Possible carcinogen, environmental pollutant |
Pyrene | C16H10 | 4 | Cigarette smoke, fossil fuels | Can cause DNA damage |
Benzo [a]anthracene | C18H12 | 4 | Charred foods, industrial processes | Known carcinogen |
Chrysene | C18H12 | 4 | Diesel exhaust, crude oil | Possible human carcinogen |
Benzo [a]pyrene | C20H12 | 5 | Grilled meat, tobacco smoke | Strong carcinogen, mutagenic |
Dibenz [a,h]anthracene | C22H14 | 5 | Fossil fuel combustion, tobacco smoke | Highly carcinogenic |
Indeno [1,2,3-cd]pyrene | C22H12 | 6 | Vehicle emissions, coal burning | Probable human carcinogen |
Benzo [g,h,i]perylene | C22H12 | 6 | Industrial combustion, waste burning | Persistent environmental pollutants |
Category | Sources | Transport and Deposition | Environmental Impact | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|
PAHs in Soil | Incomplete combustion of organic matter; industrial stack emissions; automotive exhaust | Atmospheric transport (vapor and solid phases), deposition via rainfall, sorption to soil particles, transport through soil depending on pore size and particle characteristics | Persistent contamination of soil; mobility varies with soil texture; poses a risk of spreading contamination | [20,21,22] |
PAHs in Food | Deposition from air and soil into agricultural products; bioaccumulation in marine organisms | Ingestion through contaminated foods (fish, shellfish); UV exposure increases toxicity | Toxic to humans and wildlife; bioaccumulative and persistent; especially harmful to marine species and birds | [23,24,25] |
PAHs in Sediment | Industrial effluents; runoff; atmospheric deposition in rural areas; sewage in urban areas | Settling onto water surfaces; sorption to particles; incorporation into bottom sediments | Reduced mobility due to non-polar structure; still partly soluble—low-molecular-weight PAHs may dissolve and pose health risks | [26,27,28] |
Microorganism Group | Example Species | Role in PAH Biodegradation | Citation |
---|---|---|---|
Bacteria | Pseudomonas putida, Mycobacterium sp., Sphingomonas sp., Rhodococcus sp., Bacillus sp., Acinetobacter sp., Arthrobacter sp. | Capable of degrading both low- and high-molecular-weight PAHs through enzymatic oxidation. Pseudomonas and Sphingomonas produce dioxygenases that initiate PAH breakdown. Mycobacterium can degrade persistent PAHs such as benzo [a]pyrene. | [31,32] |
Fungi | Phanerochaete chrysosporium, Aspergillus sp., Trametes versicolor, Fusarium sp., Penicillium sp., Pleurotus ostreatus | Extracellular ligninolytic enzymes such as laccase, manganese peroxidase, and lignin peroxidase are produced, which break down PAHs. White-rot fungi (Phanerochaete chrysosporium and Trametes versicolor) degrade high-molecular-weight PAHs effectively. | [31,33] |
Actinomycetes | Streptomyces sp., Nocardia sp., Micromonospora sp., Thermomonospora sp., Rhodococcus sp. | Break down complex PAH structures under aerobic conditions by producing hydrolytic enzymes and biosurfactants. Rhodococcus species can metabolize PAHs in extreme conditions. | [34,35] |
Yeast | Candida sp., Rhodotorula sp., Yarrowia lipolytica, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Trichosporon sp. | Produce biosurfactants that increase PAH solubility and enhance microbial access. Yarrowia lipolytica can degrade phenanthrene and pyrene effectively. | [33,36] |
Factor | Description | Elaboration | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Temperature | Influences microbial activity, enzymatic function, and PAH degradation. Optimum temperatures enhance biodegradation. |
| [37,38] |
Oxygen Supply | Essential for aerobic microbial activity and PAH decomposition. Oxygen availability affects biodegradation rates. |
| [39] |
Moisture Content | Affects microbial metabolism and enzymatic activity in composting. |
| [21] |
Nutrient Availability | Nutrients (C:N:P ratio) influence microbial growth and degradation efficiency. |
| [32] |
pH Levels | pH influences microbial activity and enzyme function in composting. |
| [37] |
Physical and Chemical Properties of PAHs | PAHs’ molecular weight and solubility affect their degradation efficiency. |
| [21,40] |
Microbial Community | Diversity and adaptability of microbes determine PAH biodegradation success. |
| [31,32] |
Bioaugmentation | Adding specific microorganisms to accelerate PAH biodegradation. |
| [31,32] |
Challenge Category | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
Limited Degradability | Some inorganic substances, such as heavy metals (e.g., lead, cadmium, and mercury) and radionuclides, cannot be biologically degraded. While certain metals may be immobilized or adsorbed onto organic matter, they remain in the environment in different chemical forms, posing a risk of leaching into groundwater or becoming bioavailable under changing soil conditions. | [25] |
Microbial Degradation Factors | The efficiency of PAH degradation depends on microbial activity, which is influenced by various environmental conditions. Key factors include temperature (optimal microbial activity occurs between mesophilic and thermophilic conditions), pH levels (affecting enzyme function), moisture content (required for microbial metabolism), oxygen levels (aerobic vs. anaerobic degradation pathways), nutrient availability (carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus balance), and contaminant toxicity (some PAHs and other chemicals inhibit microbial growth). | [31] |
Different Degradation Rates | The rate of contaminant breakdown varies depending on chemical structure and environmental conditions. For example, low-molecular-weight PAHs (e.g., naphthalene) degrade faster in aerobic conditions, while high-molecular-weight PAHs (e.g., benzo [a]pyrene) require specialized microbial consortia. Highly chlorinated compounds, such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), degrade more efficiently under anaerobic conditions before undergoing aerobic oxidation. | [38] |
Cost and Resource Demand | Composting is low in cost as a remedial method, though the actual cost will depend on the ratio of compost to soil used, level of contamination, and cost of the amendments. The aeration and monitoring add to the cost, but it is still cheaper compared to incineration or chemical treatment. In the form of optimization and scaling, composting can result in quite significant savings and sustainability, particularly in low-resource settings when the specific conditions are good. | [46,47] |
Operational and Scaling Issues | The logistics and environmental challenges of scaling composting as a means of PAH remediation are land requirements, complex waste handling, and monitoring costs. Along with the large volumes of soil and amendments which would further complicate operations, their byproducts are toxic, and heavy metal concentration by organic carbon loss does not enhance mobilization effectiveness. These issues have to be addressed for large-scale applications to be successful. | [46] |
Environmental trade-offs | Composting is environmentally friendly for soil restoration but comes with the following side effects: greenhouse gassing, toxic intermediates from incomplete degradation of PAHs, and heavy metal accumulation, which create long-term ecological risks. Thus, such practice should be monitored to avoid secondary pollution to make the practice safe and sustainable. | [48,49] |
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Hadibarata, T.; Syafrudin, M.; Fitriyani, N.L.; Lee, S.W. Advancements in Composting Technologies for Efficient Soil Remediation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Mini Review. Sustainability 2025, 17, 5881. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135881
Hadibarata T, Syafrudin M, Fitriyani NL, Lee SW. Advancements in Composting Technologies for Efficient Soil Remediation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Mini Review. Sustainability. 2025; 17(13):5881. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135881
Chicago/Turabian StyleHadibarata, Tony, Muhammad Syafrudin, Norma Latif Fitriyani, and Seung Won Lee. 2025. "Advancements in Composting Technologies for Efficient Soil Remediation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Mini Review" Sustainability 17, no. 13: 5881. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135881
APA StyleHadibarata, T., Syafrudin, M., Fitriyani, N. L., & Lee, S. W. (2025). Advancements in Composting Technologies for Efficient Soil Remediation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Mini Review. Sustainability, 17(13), 5881. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135881