| Literature DB >> 31836369 |
Yang Guo1, Erzhuo Zhao1, Jun Wang2, Xiaoyuan Zhang1, Haiou Huang3, Gang Yu1, Yujue Wang4.
Abstract
The abatement of several emerging contaminants (ECs) in groundwater by conventional ozonation and three ozone-based advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) - catalytic ozonation with manganese dioxide (MnO2), conventional peroxone (O3/H2O2), and electro-peroxone (EP) - was compared in this study. The addition of MnO2, H2O2, or electro-generation of H2O2 during ozonation enhanced ozone transformation to hydroxyl radicals to different extent. These changes did not considerably influence the abatement of ECs with moderate to high ozone reactivities ( [Formula: see text] ), whose abatements were similar with >90 % during all four processes. In comparison, the abatements of ozone-refractory ECs (kO3< 15 M-1s-1) were lower during conventional ozonation (∼40-85 % abatement), but could be enhanced by ∼10-40 % during the three ozone-based AOPs. Besides enhancing ozone-refractory EC abatement, the three AOPs, especially the O3/H2O2 and EP processes, reduced considerably bromate formation compared to conventional ozonation. These results demonstrate that the EP process performs similarly as catalytic ozonation and O3/H2O2 processes in terms of EC abatement and bromate control. Considering its more convenient, flexible, and safer way of operation, the EP process may provide an attractive alternative to the two more traditional AOPs for water treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced oxidation; Emerging contaminants; Ozonation; Peroxone; Water treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31836369 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2019.121829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588