| Literature DB >> 27469044 |
J A Mir-Tutusaus1, M Sarrà2, G Caminal3.
Abstract
Hospital wastewaters have a high load of pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs). Fungal treatments could be appropriate for source treatment of such effluents but the transition to non-sterile conditions proved to be difficult due to competition with indigenous microorganisms, resulting in very short-duration operations. In this article, coagulation-flocculation and UV-radiation processes were studied as pretreatments to a fungal reactor treating non-sterile hospital wastewater in sequential batch operation and continuous operation modes. The influent was spiked with ibuprofen and ketoprofen, and both compounds were successfully degraded by over 80%. UV pretreatment did not extent the fungal activity after coagulation-flocculation measured as laccase production and pellet integrity. Sequential batch operation did not reduce bacteria competition during fungal treatment. The best strategy was the addition of a coagulation-flocculation pretreatment to a continuous reactor, which led to an operation of 28days without biomass renovation.Entities:
Keywords: Fungal bioreactor; Hospital wastewater; Non-sterile; Pharmaceutical active compounds; Pretreatment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27469044 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2016.07.036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588