Background
Type: Review

Biosensors for wastewater monitoring: A review

Journal: Biosensors and Bioelectronics (18734235)Year: 30 October 2018Volume: 118Issue: Pages: 66 - 79
Ejeian F. Etedali P. Mansouri-Tehrani H.-A.Soozanipour A. Low Z.-X. Asadnia M.Taheri Kafrani A.a Razmjou A.
DOI:10.1016/j.bios.2018.07.019Language: English

Abstract

Water pollution and habitat degradation are the cause of increasing water scarcity and decline in aquatic biodiversity. While the freshwater availability has been declining through past decades, water demand has continued to increase particularly in areas with arid and semi-arid climate. Monitoring of pollutants in wastewater effluents are critical to identifying water pollution area for treatment. Conventional detection methods are not effective in tracing multiple harmful components in wastewater due to their variability along different times and sources. Currently, the development of biosensing instruments attracted significant attention because of their high sensitivity, selectivity, reliability, simplicity, low-cost and real-time response. This paper provides a general overview on reported biosensors, which have been applied for the recognition of important organic chemicals, heavy metals, and microorganisms in dark waters. The significance and successes of nanotechnology in the field of biomolecular detection are also reviewed. The commercially available biosensors and their main challenges in wastewater monitoring are finally discussed. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.


Author Keywords

BiosensorHeavy metalsMicroorganismsOrganic materialsWastewater monitoring

Other Keywords

Environmental MonitoringMetals, HeavyReproducibility of ResultsWaste WaterWater Pollutants, ChemicalBiodiversityBiosensorsHeavy metalsMicroorganismsOrganic chemicalsWastewater treatmentWater pollutionWater treatmentdissolved oxygengold nanoparticleheavy metalmulti walled nanotubeorganic compoundorganic matterpolybrominated biphenylpolybrominated diphenyl etherpolychlorinated biphenylquantum dotAquatic biodiversityBiomolecular detectionsConventional detectionHabitat degradationOrganic materialsReal time responseSemi-arid climateWastewater effluentsaqueous solutionbiochemical oxygen demandchemical oxygen demandelectrochemical detectionleachinglimit of detectionmicrobial fuel cellmicrofluidicsmicroorganism detectionnanotechnologynonhumanpersistent organic pollutantpiezoelectricitypollution monitoringReviewsurface chargewater qualityanalysischemistryproceduresreproducibilitywater pollutantEffluents