4.7 Article

Combined ultrasound-ozone treatment for reutilization of primary effluent-a preliminary study

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 700-710

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-020-10467-y

Keywords

Water recovery; Ozonation; Ultrasound; Disinfection; Primary effluent; AOP

Funding

  1. Universita degli Studi di Udine within the CRUI-CARE Agreement

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The study explores the potential of low-frequency ultrasound coupled with ozone process for disinfecting municipal wastewater while preserving nutrients, aiming at possible reuse in different sectors. The results show promising removal efficiency for various contaminants and high disinfection performance, highlighting the value for agricultural reuse and potential savings on chemical fertilizers. Further studies are needed to evaluate the feasibility of scaling up the system.
The present work is a preliminary study on the potential of low-frequency ultrasound irradiation coupled with O(3)process for the disinfection of a primary effluent from a municipal wastewater treatment plant preserving nutrient levels (in particular nitrogen and phosphorous), for its possible reuse in civil, industrial, and agricultural sectors. The treated water could be reused, after appropriate dilution, contributing to the circular economy perspective and reducing the need for both chemical fertilizer addition and freshwater supply. The effect of different specific ultrasonic energies and ozone doses was assessed on a bench-top system, composed of an ultrasonic reactor and a semi-batch ozonation vessel. The results showed that the combined US-O(3)process produces a good removal efficiency regarding soluble Chemical Oxygen Demand, sCOD (ca. 60%), anionic surfactants (ca. 50%), and formaldehyde (ca. 50%), and an optimal abatement for Methylene Blue Active Substances (MBAS, > 90%). The process also reached high disinfection performances, obtaining 4 logs forE. coliand 5 log abatement for Total Coliforms. The high removal efficiency is matched by an outstanding retention of nutrients (total nitrogen and orthophosphate) highlighting a high potential value for agricultural reuse of the treated primary effluent, with possible significant saving of chemical fertilizers. It was concluded that low-frequency ultrasound pre-treatment, combined with ozonation, could be a useful process for primary effluent recovery for several purposes. Further studies are expected to be planned and executed to evaluate system scale-up feasibility.

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