Chemical Engineering Journal, Vol.290, 12-20, 2016
Removal of emerging contaminants from a primary effluent of municipal wastewater by means of sequential biological degradation-solar photocatalytic oxidation processes
Treatment of primary wastewater effluent containing a mixture of nine pharmaceuticals model compounds (acetaminophen ACM, antipyrine ANT, caffeine CAF, ketorolac KET, metoprolol MET, sulfamethoxazole SFX, carbamazepine CARB, hydrochlorothiazide HCT and diclofenac DIC) has been carried out by means of aerobic biodegradation followed by different advanced oxidation processes (solar heterogeneous photocatalysis with TiO2, solar photo-Fenton and ozonation). Only ACM and CAF were completely removed from municipal wastewater in aerobic biological experiments. Apparently, the bacteriostatic nature of SFX could lead to some extent to bacterial growth inhibition. Photocatalytic ozonation allows for a higher degradation rate than simple photocatalytic oxidation in the presence of oxygen. Under the conditions investigated, emerging compounds (ECs) degradation (sum of concentrations) in the photocatalytic ozonation was in the range 80-100% depending on the system. Application of solar light (SL) Fe(III) photocatalytic ozonation, SL/O-3/Fe (III) (180 min) and ozonation (45 min) systems reduced the concentrations of the studied emerging contaminants below their detection limit (2 mu g L-1). Nevertheless, photocatalytic ozonation led to 41.3% mineralization compared to 34% achieved by single ozonation. Toxicity analyses by Daphnia magna showed no effluent toxicity after the application of the three tertiary treatments. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Solar photocatalysis;Titanium dioxide;Ozonation;Pharmaceuticals compounds;Domestic wastewater