| Literature DB >> 26255127 |
Stefanos Giannakis1, Franco Alejandro Gamarra Vives1, Dominique Grandjean2, Anoys Magnet3, Luiz Felippe De Alencastro2, César Pulgarin4.
Abstract
In this study, wastewater from the output of three different secondary treatment facilities (Activated Sludge, Moving Bed Bioreactor and Coagulation-Flocculation) present in the municipal wastewater treatment plant of Vidy, Lausanne (Switzerland), was further treated with various oxidation processes (UV, UV/H2O2, solar irradiation, Fenton, solar photo-Fenton), at laboratory scale. For this assessment, 6 organic micropollutants in agreement with the new environmental legislation requirements in Switzerland were selected (Carbamazepine, Clarithromycin, Diclofenac, Metoprolol, Benzotriazole, Mecoprop) and monitored throughout the treatment. Also, the overall removal of the organic load was assessed. After each secondary treatment, the efficiency of the AOPs increased in the following order: Coagulation-Flocculation < Activated Sludge < Moving Bed Bioreactor, in almost all cases. From the different combinations tested, municipal wastewater subjected to biological treatment followed by UV/H2O2 resulted in the highest elimination levels. Wastewater previously treated by physicochemical treatment demonstrated considerably inhibited micropollutant degradation rates. The degradation kinetics were determined, yielding: k (UV) < k (UV/H2O2) and k (Fenton) < k (solar irradiation) < k (photo-Fenton). Finally, the evolution of global pollution parameters (COD & TOC elimination) was followed and the degradation pathways for the effluent organic matter are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced oxidation processes (AOP); Average oxidation state (AOS); Biological treatment; Degradation kinetics; Effluent organic matter (EfOM); Micropollutants
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26255127 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2015.07.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236