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Civil Engineering

Microbes in bioconcrete technology: exploring the fundamentals and state-of-the-art findings for advancing civil engineering

ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 726-736 | Received 13 Mar 2023, Accepted 27 Jun 2023, Published online: 25 Jul 2023
 

ABSTRACT

The bioconcrete technology on cementitious composites over the past years has brought us the application of microbes on concrete materials with self-healing ability. Certain microbes, such as bacteria, algae, and fungi, have been identified as able to enhance the strength of concrete and other properties, including durability, resistance, self-healing, and others. The key ability of those microbes is their capability to induce calcite biomineralization, which is also known as microbiologically induced calcium carbonate precipitation. This ability allows microbes to produce calcites under specific biochemical reactions comparable with the bonding material in cement concrete, thus enhancing concrete properties and healing microcracks before further propagation occurs. However, each microbe has its own characteristic that brings certain challenges and benefits to its application, considering the reactants, products, availability, survivability, sustainability, etc. Although many studies have been done in this field, the microbes, cultivations treatments, testing methods, and obtained outputs vary between one finding and another. This paper discloses both the fundamental and state-of-the-art bioconcrete findings for different types of microbes.

CO EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:

ASSOCIATE EDITOR:

Nomenclature

ATCC=

American Type Culture Collection

Cfu=

colony-forming unit

oC=

degree Celsius

Cell=

bacterial cell

EDTA=

Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid

ESEM=

Environmental scanning electron microscope

EDX=

Energy Dispersive X-ray

g=

grams

HCL=

Hydrochloric acid

kg=

kilogram

kPa=

Kilopascal

L=

Liter

MECR=

Microbiologically enhanced crack remediation

MICP=

Microbiologically induced calcite precipitation

MPN=

most-probable-number

mL=

milliliter

PDA=

Potato dextrose agar

pH=

potential of hydrogen

Rpm=

revolutions per minute

SEM=

Scanning Electron Microscope

XRD=

X-ray diffraction

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Authors’ contributions

R. B. conceived the idea and methodology of this study. R. B. conducted the literature review and data analysis in supervision of K. L, M S. R. B. wrote the manuscript with inputs from K. W. and M. S. A H W summarized and edit the manuscript. All authors reviewed the final version of this draft and approved it.

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