4.7 Article

Solar photo-Fenton mineralization of antipyrine in aqueous solution

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 130, Issue -, Pages 64-71

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2013.08.043

Keywords

Antipyrine; Emerging contaminant; Pharmaceuticals; TOC; Solar radiation

Funding

  1. JCCM [POII10-0114-3563]

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The mineralization of an aqueous solution of antipyrine (C11H12N2O), an emerging contaminant, using a solar photocatalytic oxidation process assisted with ferrioxalate was evaluated in a compound parabolic collector (CPC) pilot plant. Under the selected operating conditions ([H2O2] = 250 ppm, [Fe] = 14 ppm, pH = 2.7, and [(COOH)(2)center dot 2H(2)O] = 80 ppm), 60% of TOC is removed just 5 min after treating an aqueous solution containing 50 ppm of antipyrine. The addition of oxalic acid up to a maximum concentration of 80 ppm significantly increases the mineralization rate during the first 15 min of the reaction. The synergism between the solar and dark H2O2/ferrioxalate process was quantified at 79%, calculated from the pseudo first-order mineralization rate constants. The operational costs due to the consumption of electrical energy, reagents and catalysts were calculated from the optimal conditions and compared with a novel sono-photocatalytic process using artificial UV-light. The results showed that the ferrioxalate-assisted solar photo-Fenton process was economically feasible, being able to achieve up to 60% mineralization with a total cost of 4.5 cent sic/g TOC removed (1.1 sic/m(3)). (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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