4.8 Article

UV/H2O2 process stability and pilot-scale validation for trace organic chemical removal from wastewater treatment plant effluents

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 136, Issue -, Pages 169-179

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2018.02.044

Keywords

Advanced oxidation; Wastewater treatment; Trace organic chemicals; Modeling; Pilot-scale operation; OH-Radical exposure

Funding

  1. Bavarian Ministry of the Environment
  2. Bavarian Environment Agency (Bayerisches Landesamt fur Umwelt) [76e197]
  3. Municipal Sewage Company of the City of Munich (Munchner Stadtentwasserung, MSE)

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This study investigated the removal of 15 trace organic chemicals (TOrCs) occurring at ambient concentrations from municipal wastewater treatment plant effluent by advanced oxidation using UV/H2O2 at pilot-scale. Pseudo first-order rate constants (k(obs)) for photolytic as well as combined oxidative and photolytic degradation observed at pilot-scale were validated with results from a bench-scale collimated beam device. No significant difference was determined between pilot- and lab-scale performance. During continuous pilot-scale operation at constant UV fluence of 800 mJ/cm(2) and H2O2 dosage of 10 mg/L, the removal of various TOrCs was investigated. The average observed removal for photo-susceptible (k(UV)>10(-3) cm(2)/mJ; like diclofenac, iopromide and sulfamethoxazole), moderately photo-susceptible (10(-4)<10(-3) cm(2)/mL; like climbazole, tramadol, sotalol, citalopram, benzotriazole, venlafaxine and metoprolol), and most photo-resistant (k(UV)<10(-4) cm(2)/mJ; like primidone, carbamazepine and gabapentin) compounds was 90%, 49% and 37% including outliers, respectively. The poorly reactive compound TCEP was not significantly eliminated during pilot-scale experiments. Additionally, based on removal kinetics of photo-resistant TOrCs, continuous pilot-scale operation revealed high variations of OH-radical exposure determined from removal kinetics of photo-resistant TOrCs, primarily due to nitrite concentration fluctuations in the feed water. Furthermore, a correlation between OH-radical exposure and scavenging capacity could be determined and verified by mechanistic modeling using UV fluence, H2O2 dosage, and standard water quality parameters (i.e., DOC, NO3-, NO2- and HCO3-) as model input data. This correlation revealed the possibility of OH-radical exposure prediction by water matrix parameters and proved its applicability for pilot-scale operations. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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