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Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?

Vrvić, Miroslav; Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana; Beškoski, Vladimir; Ilić, Mila; Miletić, Srđan; Milić, Jelena; Avdalović, Jelena

(European association for chemical and molecular sciences (EuCheMS), 2015)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Vrvić, Miroslav
AU  - Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana
AU  - Beškoski, Vladimir
AU  - Ilić, Mila
AU  - Miletić, Srđan
AU  - Milić, Jelena
AU  - Avdalović, Jelena
PY  - 2015
UR  - https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5533
AB  - Usually the interest in, investigation of, development and application of principles of green chemistry and engineering are directed towards concrete chemical substances and processes and the same applies to fuels as one of key resources for the survival of civilization. On the other hand, soil is the most dynamic four-stage (solid-liquid-gaseous-biological stage) ecosphere which is essential for the provision of food to the ever-growing population of our planet. At the same time, soil is exposed to all forms of devastation, including extensive and heavy pollution by a variety of dangerous substances, among which components of oil and oil derivatives are the most frequent pollutants. Also, spontaneous paedogenesis is the slowest process by far in comparison to the anthropogenic devastation of soil. The application of non-pathogenic microorganisms (plants to a smaller extent and an insignificant number of animals) for biological transformations and decontamination of the polluted soil and the disintegration of pollutants under the controlled conditions are bioremediation procedures that most often result in the complete mineralization, producing clean soil and soilfield material with consortia of microorganisms and humic substances that are fundamental for fertility. Bioremediation is a (bio)technology which is compatible with all the principles of green chemistry and engineering and it is sustainable since it conserves and generates the soil as a - resource.
PB  - European association for chemical and molecular sciences (EuCheMS)
C3  - Book of Abstracts - 15th EuCheMS International Conference on Chemistry and the Environment (ICCE 2015), 20-24 September 2015, Leipzig, Germany
T1  - Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?
SP  - 288
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5533
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Vrvić, Miroslav and Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana and Beškoski, Vladimir and Ilić, Mila and Miletić, Srđan and Milić, Jelena and Avdalović, Jelena",
year = "2015",
abstract = "Usually the interest in, investigation of, development and application of principles of green chemistry and engineering are directed towards concrete chemical substances and processes and the same applies to fuels as one of key resources for the survival of civilization. On the other hand, soil is the most dynamic four-stage (solid-liquid-gaseous-biological stage) ecosphere which is essential for the provision of food to the ever-growing population of our planet. At the same time, soil is exposed to all forms of devastation, including extensive and heavy pollution by a variety of dangerous substances, among which components of oil and oil derivatives are the most frequent pollutants. Also, spontaneous paedogenesis is the slowest process by far in comparison to the anthropogenic devastation of soil. The application of non-pathogenic microorganisms (plants to a smaller extent and an insignificant number of animals) for biological transformations and decontamination of the polluted soil and the disintegration of pollutants under the controlled conditions are bioremediation procedures that most often result in the complete mineralization, producing clean soil and soilfield material with consortia of microorganisms and humic substances that are fundamental for fertility. Bioremediation is a (bio)technology which is compatible with all the principles of green chemistry and engineering and it is sustainable since it conserves and generates the soil as a - resource.",
publisher = "European association for chemical and molecular sciences (EuCheMS)",
journal = "Book of Abstracts - 15th EuCheMS International Conference on Chemistry and the Environment (ICCE 2015), 20-24 September 2015, Leipzig, Germany",
title = "Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?",
pages = "288",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5533"
}
Vrvić, M., Gojgić-Cvijović, G., Beškoski, V., Ilić, M., Miletić, S., Milić, J.,& Avdalović, J.. (2015). Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?. in Book of Abstracts - 15th EuCheMS International Conference on Chemistry and the Environment (ICCE 2015), 20-24 September 2015, Leipzig, Germany
European association for chemical and molecular sciences (EuCheMS)., 288.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5533
Vrvić M, Gojgić-Cvijović G, Beškoski V, Ilić M, Miletić S, Milić J, Avdalović J. Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?. in Book of Abstracts - 15th EuCheMS International Conference on Chemistry and the Environment (ICCE 2015), 20-24 September 2015, Leipzig, Germany. 2015;:288.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5533 .
Vrvić, Miroslav, Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana, Beškoski, Vladimir, Ilić, Mila, Miletić, Srđan, Milić, Jelena, Avdalović, Jelena, "Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?" in Book of Abstracts - 15th EuCheMS International Conference on Chemistry and the Environment (ICCE 2015), 20-24 September 2015, Leipzig, Germany (2015):288,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5533 .

Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?

Vrvić, Miroslav; Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana; Beškoski, Vladimir; Ilić, Mila; Miletić, Srđan; Milić, Jelena; Avdalović, Jelena

(2015)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Vrvić, Miroslav
AU  - Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana
AU  - Beškoski, Vladimir
AU  - Ilić, Mila
AU  - Miletić, Srđan
AU  - Milić, Jelena
AU  - Avdalović, Jelena
PY  - 2015
UR  - https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5534
AB  - Usually the interest in, investigation of, development and application of principles of green chemistry and engineering are directed towards concrete chemical substances and processes and the same applies to fuels as one of key resources for the survival of civilization. On the other hand, soil is the most dynamic four-stage (solid-liquid-gaseous-biological stage) ecosphere which is essential for the provision of food to the ever-growing population of our planet. At the same time, soil is exposed to all forms of devastation, including extensive and heavy pollution by a variety of dangerous substances, among which components of oil and oil derivatives are the most frequent pollutants. Also, spontaneous paedogenesis is the slowest process by far in comparison to the anthropogenic devastation of soil. The application of non-pathogenic microorganisms (plants to a smaller extent and an insignificant number of animals) for biological transformations and decontamination of the polluted soil and the disintegration of pollutants under the controlled conditions are bioremediation procedures that most often result in the complete mineralization, producing clean soil and soilfield material with consortia of microorganisms and humic substances that are fundamental for fertility. Bioremediation is a (bio)technology which is compatible with all the principles of green chemistry and engineering and it is sustainable since it conserves and generates the soil as a - resource.
T1  - Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5534
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Vrvić, Miroslav and Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana and Beškoski, Vladimir and Ilić, Mila and Miletić, Srđan and Milić, Jelena and Avdalović, Jelena",
year = "2015",
abstract = "Usually the interest in, investigation of, development and application of principles of green chemistry and engineering are directed towards concrete chemical substances and processes and the same applies to fuels as one of key resources for the survival of civilization. On the other hand, soil is the most dynamic four-stage (solid-liquid-gaseous-biological stage) ecosphere which is essential for the provision of food to the ever-growing population of our planet. At the same time, soil is exposed to all forms of devastation, including extensive and heavy pollution by a variety of dangerous substances, among which components of oil and oil derivatives are the most frequent pollutants. Also, spontaneous paedogenesis is the slowest process by far in comparison to the anthropogenic devastation of soil. The application of non-pathogenic microorganisms (plants to a smaller extent and an insignificant number of animals) for biological transformations and decontamination of the polluted soil and the disintegration of pollutants under the controlled conditions are bioremediation procedures that most often result in the complete mineralization, producing clean soil and soilfield material with consortia of microorganisms and humic substances that are fundamental for fertility. Bioremediation is a (bio)technology which is compatible with all the principles of green chemistry and engineering and it is sustainable since it conserves and generates the soil as a - resource.",
title = "Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5534"
}
Vrvić, M., Gojgić-Cvijović, G., Beškoski, V., Ilić, M., Miletić, S., Milić, J.,& Avdalović, J.. (2015). Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?. .
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5534
Vrvić M, Gojgić-Cvijović G, Beškoski V, Ilić M, Miletić S, Milić J, Avdalović J. Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?. 2015;.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5534 .
Vrvić, Miroslav, Gojgić-Cvijović, Gordana, Beškoski, Vladimir, Ilić, Mila, Miletić, Srđan, Milić, Jelena, Avdalović, Jelena, "Are Soil and Bioremediation in Focus of Sustainable Green Chemistry and Engineering?" (2015),
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_cer_5534 .