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A critical review of advanced oxidation processes for emerging trace organic contaminant degradation: Mechanisms, factors, degradation products, and effluent toxicity

Journal

JOURNAL OF WATER PROCESS ENGINEERING
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jwpe.2020.101778

Keywords

Trace organic contaminants; Advanced oxidation processes; Hydroxyl radicals; Degradation product; Toxicity evaluation

Funding

  1. UOW-HEC joint scholarship

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The persistent and low biodegradability of trace organic contaminants reduce their removal effectiveness in conventional wastewater treatments. Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) have been extensively studied for degrading a wide range of TrOCs by producing reactive oxygen species. Factors such as concentration and nature of TrOCs, bulk wastewater characteristics, and dose of chemicals/catalysts used affect the degradation rates by different AOPs.
The persistent nature and low biodegradability of a large number of trace organic contaminants (TrOCs) reduce effectiveness of their removal by conventional wastewater treatments. In this context, advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), such as photolysis, photocatalysis, ozonation, Fenton process, anodic oxidation, sonolysis and wet air oxidation, have been studied extensively for the effective degradation of the wide range of TrOCs. All AOPs produce reactive oxygen species (HO2 center dot, O-2(center dot-)), especially hydroxyl radicals that unselectively attack contaminants and oxidise them. Factors affecting the degradation rates of TrOCs by different AOPs include the concentration and nature of the TrOCs, bulk wastewater characteristics, dose of chemicals or catalysts used, and other reaction parameters. This review critically analyses the overview of already established AOPs, the effect of the structure of TrOCs based on different functional groups such as electron donating groups (EDGs) and electron withdrawing groups (EWGs) on their degradation by each AOP. The overall degradation rates based on data collected from a comprehensive literature review show that ozonation achieves effective degradation for a broad range of TrOCs, but it can lead to the production of toxic degradation by-products. By comparison, photocatalysis shows moderate to high degradation rate for TrOCs. Photolysis and Fenton processes show TrOC-specific suitability. This review also demonstrates that optimum doses of chemicals/catalysts are required for each AOP. This is because excessive concentrations of catalysts or other chemicals (e.g., H2O2: iron dose in Fenton process) may result in low TrOC degradation. Degradation of individual TrOCs can result in a number of degradation byproduct that varies in nature. Different AOP has different reaction mechanisms that also affect the number and nature of by-product formation during TrOC degradation.

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