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Simultaneous colour and DON removal from sewage treatment plant effluent: Alum coagulation of melanoidin

Authors :
Peter Griffiths
Paul Lant
Jason Dwyer
Source :
Water Research. 43:553-561
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2009.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to detect and characterise melanoidin in sewage treatment plant (STP) effluent, and to study the ability of alum coagulation to remove the colour and dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) associated with melanoidin. The melanoidin is non-biodegradable due to the complex cyclic based structure and thus it directly contributes to effluent nitrogen concentrations from the sewage treatment plant (STP). Lowering of effluent total nitrogen limits and the link between colour and chlorinated disinfection by-products have therefore driven a need to understand the structure, properties and treatability of DON species found in STP effluent. The focus of this paper is the refractory coloured, organic nitrogen compound melanoidin. Wetalla STP effluent has relatively high colour (170mg-PtCoL(-1)) and DON (2.5mgL(-1)) for a biological nutrient removal STP, owing to an industrial supply of melanoidin containing molasses fermentation wastewater. Alum coagulation jar tests were performed on synthetic melanoidin solution, STP effluent containing melanoidin (Wetalla, Toowoomba, Australia) and STP effluent free of melanoidin (Merrimac, Gold Coast, Australia) to examine the treatability of melanoidin and its associated colour and DON content when present in STP effluent. The removal of melanoidin from STP effluent resulted in significant colour and DON reduction. An alum dose of 30mgL(-1) as aluminium was sufficient to reach maximum removal of colour (75%), DON (42%) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) (30%) present in melanoidin containing STP effluent. Alum was shown to preferentially remove DON with a molecular weight >10kDa over small molecular weight DON. Fluorescence excitation-emission matrix examination of the humic compounds present in the STP effluent indicated that melanoidin type humic compounds were more readily removed by alum coagulation than other humic compounds.

Details

ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4b4c35324a4fb57fd8f31494725d5bd1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2008.10.053