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Biodegradation of pharmaceuticals in hospital wastewater by staged Moving Bed Biofilm Reactors (MBBR)

Authors :
Klaus Litty
Ravi Kumar Chhetri
Gordon Tze Hoong Ooi
Caroline Kragelund
Magnus Christensson
Henrik Rasmus Andersen
Kai Bester
Monica Escola Casas
Kamilla Marie Speht Hansen
Source :
Escola, M, Chhetri, R K, Ooi, G, Hansen, K M S, Litty, K, Christensson, M, Kragelund, C, Andersen, H R & Bester, K 2015, ' Biodegradation of pharmaceuticals in hospital wastewater by staged Moving Bed Biofilm Reactors (MBBR) ', Water Research, vol. 83, pp. 293-302 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2015.06.042
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

Hospital wastewater represents a significant input of pharmaceuticals into municipal wastewater. As Moving Bed Biofilm Reactors (MBBRs) appear to remove organic micro-pollutants, hospital wastewater was treated with a pilot plant consisting of three MBBRs in series. The removal of pharmaceuticals was studied in two experiments: 1) A batch experiment where pharmaceuticals were spiked to each reactor and 2) a continuous flow experiment at native concentrations. DOC removal, nitrification as well as removal of pharmaceuticals (including X-ray contrast media, β-blockers, analgesics and antibiotics) occurred mainly in the first reactor. In the batch experiment most of the compounds followed a single first-order kinetics degradation function, giving degradation rate constants ranged from 5.77 × 10 −3 to 4.07 h −1 , from −5.53 × 10 −3 to 9.24 × 10 −1 h −1 and from 1.83 × 10 −3 to 2.42 × 10 −1 h −1 for first, second and third reactor respectively. Generally, the highest removal rate constants were found in the first reactor while the lowest were found in the third one. This order was inverted for most compounds, when the removal rate constants were normalized to biomass, indicating that the last tank had the most effective biofilms. In the batch experiment, 21 out of 26 compounds were assessed to be degraded with more than 20% within the MBBR train. In the continuous flow experiment the measured removal rates were lower than those estimated from the batch experiments.

Details

ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
83
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b51fb41ea67e396ce68951e369a0a08a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2015.06.042