4.7 Article

Solar-driven free chlorine advanced oxidation process for simultaneous removal of microcontaminants and microorganisms in natural water at pilot-scale

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 288, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.132493

Keywords

Free chlorine; Natural water; Microcontaminants elimination; Bacteria inactivation; Chlorate ions; Solar irradiation

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [142350/2016-8, 205818/2018-8, 305943/2020-0]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (PANIWATER project) [820718]
  3. FEDER (NAVIA Project) [PID 2019-110441RB-C32]
  4. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [820718] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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The study evaluated the effectiveness of a solar-driven free chlorine advanced oxidation process for removing organic microcontaminants and bacteria from natural water. Results showed high removal efficiency both at laboratory and pilot-scale, making the process a promising method for water treatment.
Contamination of natural water (NW) by emerging contaminants has been widely pointed out as one of the main challenges to ensure high-quality drinking water. Thus, the effectiveness of a solar-driven free chlorine advanced oxidation process simultaneously investigating the elimination of six organic microcontaminants (OMCs) and three bacteria from NW at a pilot-scale was evaluated in this study. Firstly, the solar/free chlorine process was studied at lab-scale using a solar simulator to evaluate the effect of free chlorine concentration (0.5-10 mg L-1) on OMC degradation and generation of toxic oxyanions (e.g., ClO3- ions). Thus, the best free chlorine concentration observed was applied for the simultaneous removal of OMCs and pathogens under natural solar light at pilot scale. At lab-scale, the solar/free chlorine (2.5 mg L-1) process achieved 80% of total degradation in 5 min (1.4 kJ L-1 of accumulative UV energy) with an oxidant consumption of 0.3 mg L-1 and without ClO3- generation. Similar results were attained under natural solar irradiation at a pilot-scale. For all bacteria strains, the legally required detection limit (DL = 1 CFU 100 mL(-1)) for reclaimed water reuse was attained in a short contact time. Still, more importantly, the solar/free chlorine (2.5 mg L-1) process effectively avoided the possible bacterial regrowth in the post-treated sample after six days. Finally, the combination of free chlorine with solar irradiation provided a simple and energy-efficient process for OMC and bacteria removal in NW at a pilot-scale.

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