4.3 Article

Food By-Product Valorization by Using Plant-Based Coagulants Combined with AOPs for Agro-Industrial Wastewater Treatment

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19074134

Keywords

circular economy; by-products reuse; plant-based coagulants; wastewater treatment; coagulation-flocculation-decantation; photo-Fenton

Funding

  1. FCT-Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology [PD/BD/135332/2017]
  2. Doctoral Program Agricultural Production Chains-from Farm to Fork (PD/00122/2012) [PD/00122/2012]
  3. European Social Funds
  4. Regional Operational Program Norte 2020
  5. Project AgriFood XXI [NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-0000412020]
  6. research unit: CITAB [UIDB/04033/2020]
  7. research unit: CQVR [UIDB/00616/2020]
  8. research unit: LEAF [UIDB/04129/2020]
  9. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PD/BD/135332/2017] Funding Source: FCT

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This study investigates the use of plant by-products as coagulants for treating elderberry wastewater, with promising results obtained after optimization. The combination of plant-based coagulants and the photo-Fenton process provides a potential strategy for effective wastewater treatment.
Re-using and adding value to by-products is one of the current focuses of the agri-food industry, following the Sustainable Development Goals of United Nations. In this work, the by-products of four plants, namely chestnut burr, acorn peel, olive leaf, and grape stem were used as coagulants to treat elderberry wastewater (EW), a problematic liquid effluent. EW pre-treatment using these natural coagulants showed promising results after pH and coagulant dosage optimization. However, the decrease in total organic carbon (TOC) was not significant, due to the addition of the plant-based natural coagulants which contain carbon content. After this pre-treatment, the photo-Fenton advanced oxidation process was selected, after preliminary assays, to improve the global performance of the EW treatment. Photo-Fenton was also optimized for the parameters of pH, H2O2, Fe2+, and irradiance power, and the best conditions were applied to the EW treatment. Under the best operational conditions defined in the parametric study, the combined results of coagulation-flocculation-decantation (CFD) and photo-Fenton for chestnut burr, acorn peel, olive leaf, and grape stem were, respectively, 90.2, 89.5, 91.5, and 88.7% for TOC removal; 88.7, 82.0, 90.2 and 93.1%, respectively, for turbidity removal; and finally, 40.6, 42.2, 45.3, and 39.1%, respectively, for TSS removal. As a final remark, it is possible to suggest that plant-based coagulants, combined with photo-Fenton, can be a promising strategy for EW treatment that simultaneously enables valorization by adding value back to food by-products.

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