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Removal of pharmaceutical compounds commonly-found in wastewater through a hybrid biological and adsorption process

Authors :
Universitat Politècnica de València. Instituto de Seguridad Industrial, Radiofísica y Medioambiental - Institut de Seguretat Industrial, Radiofísica i Mediambiental
Universitat Politècnica de València. Departamento de Ingeniería Química y Nuclear - Departament d'Enginyeria Química i Nuclear
GENERALITAT VALENCIANA
Ferrer-Polonio, Eva
Fernández-Navarro, Julián
Iborra-Clar, María Isabel
Alcaina-Miranda, María Isabel
Mendoza Roca, José Antonio
Universitat Politècnica de València. Instituto de Seguridad Industrial, Radiofísica y Medioambiental - Institut de Seguretat Industrial, Radiofísica i Mediambiental
Universitat Politècnica de València. Departamento de Ingeniería Química y Nuclear - Departament d'Enginyeria Química i Nuclear
GENERALITAT VALENCIANA
Ferrer-Polonio, Eva
Fernández-Navarro, Julián
Iborra-Clar, María Isabel
Alcaina-Miranda, María Isabel
Mendoza Roca, José Antonio
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

[EN] Nowadays, alternative options to conventional wastewater treatment should be studied due to rising concerns emerged by the presence of pharmaceuticals compounds (PhCs) in the aquatic environment. In this work, a combined system including biological treatment by activated sludge plus adsorption with activated carbon is proposed to remove three selected drugs (acetaminophen (ACT), caffeine (CAF) and ibuprofen (IBU)) in a concentration of 2 mg L-1 of each one. For it three sequencing batch reactors (SBR) were operated. SBR-B treated a synthetic wastewater (SWW) without target drugs and SBR-PhC and SBR-PhC + AC operated with SWW doped with the three drugs, adding into SBR-PhC + AC 1.5 g L-1 of a mesoporous granular activated carbon. Results showed that the hybrid system SBR-activated carbon produced an effluent free of PhCs, which in addition had higher quality than that achieved in a conventional activated sludge treatment in terms of lower COD, turbidity and SMP concentrations. On the other hand, five possible routes of removal for target drugs during the biological treatment were studied. Hydrolysis, oxidation and volatilization pathways were negligible after 6 h of reaction time. Adsorption mute only was significant for ACT, which was adsorbed completely after 5 h of reaction, while only 1.9% of CAF and 5.6% of IBU were adsorbed. IBU was the least biodegradable compound.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
TEXT, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1273092406
Document Type :
Electronic Resource