4.8 Article

Prediction of micropollutant elimination during ozonation of a hospital wastewater effluent

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 64, Issue -, Pages 134-148

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2014.06.027

Keywords

Ozonation; Advanced oxidation process; Micropollutant; Pharmaceutical; Hospital wastewater; QSAR

Funding

  1. Swiss Canton AG
  2. Swiss Canton BE
  3. Swiss Canton BL
  4. Swiss Canton GE
  5. Swiss Canton SG
  6. Swiss Canton SH
  7. Swiss Canton SO
  8. Swiss Canton SZ
  9. Swiss Canton TG
  10. Swiss Canton VD
  11. Swiss Canton ZH
  12. Federal Office for Spatial Development (ARE)
  13. budget 2 of NRP in the framework of the InterReg IVB project PILLS
  14. Swiss Federal Offices for the Environment FOEN [07.0142.PJ/H163-1663, 07.0142.PJ/I232-2755]
  15. Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea - Ministry of Science ICT & Future Planning [NRF-2012R1A1A1010985]

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Determining optimal ozone doses for organic micropollutant elimination during wastewater ozonation is challenged by the presence of a large number of structurally diverse micropollutants for varying wastewater matrice compositions. A chemical kinetics approach based on ozone and hydroxyl radical ((OH)-O-center dot) rate constant and measurements of ozone and (OH)-O-center dot exposures is proposed to predict the micropollutant elimination efficiency. To further test and validate the chemical kinetics approach, the elimination efficiency of 25 micropollutants present in a hospital wastewater effluent from a pilot-scale membrane bioreactor (MBR) were determined at pH 7.0 and 8.5 in bench-scale experiments with ozone alone and ozone combined with H2O2 as a function of DOC-normalized specific ozone doses (gO(3)/gDOC). Furthermore, ozone and (OH)-O-center dot exposures, (OH)-O-center dot yields, and (OH)-O-center dot consumption rates were determined. Consistent eliminations as a function of gO(3)/gDOC were observed for micropollutants with similar ozone and (OH)-O-center dot rate constants. They could be classified into five groups having characteristic elimination patterns. By increasing the pH from 7.0 to 8.5, the elimination levels increased for the amine-containing micropollutants due to the increased apparent second-order ozone rate constants while decreased for most micropollutants due to the diminished ozone or (OH)-O-center dot exposures. Increased (OH)-O-center dot quenching by effluent organic matter and carbonate with increasing pH was responsible for the lower (OH)-O-center dot exposures. Upon H2O2 addition, the elimination levels of the micropollutants slightly increased at pH 7 (<8%) while decreased considerably at pH 8.5 (up to 31%). The elimination efficiencies of the selected micropollutants could be predicted based on their ozone and (OH)-O-center dot rate constants (predicted or taken from literature) and the determined ozone and (OH)-O-center dot exposures. Reasonable agreements between the measured and predicted elimination levels were found, demonstrating that the proposed chemical kinetics method can be used for a generalized prediction of micropollutant elimination during wastewater zonation. Out of 67 analyzed micropollutants, 56 were present in the tested hospital wastewater effluent. Two-thirds of the present micropollutants were found to be ozone-reactive and efficiently eliminated at low ozone doses (e.g., >80% for gO(3)/gDOC = 0.5). (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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