4.3 Article

Biochar Water Treatment for Control of Organic Micropollutants with Ultraviolet A Surrogate Monitoring

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 298-309

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ees.2020.0173

Keywords

biochar water treatment; contaminants of emerging concern; engineering for developing communities; hygiene for development; low-cost sensors; sanitation; water

Funding

  1. US EPA Science to Achieve Results (STAR) graduate research fellowship Southern Nevada Water Authority
  2. North Carolina State University
  3. University of Sri Jayewardenepura (Sri Lanka) Partnership for Excellence in Global WaSH (Water-Sanitation-Hygiene) Research Aqueous Solutions

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Biochar adsorbent shows great potential for water treatment, especially in settings where granular activated carbon is not feasible. Using dissolved organic matter (DOM) as a surrogate parameter for monitoring biochar adsorber bed life is a key focus of current research.
Biochar adsorbent can be produced in low-resource settings using local materials and simple pyrolysis technology, and it has shown promise for uptake of micropollutants (MPs) such as pesticides, pharmaceuticals, industrial compounds, and chemicals released from consumer goods present in water at ng/L to mu g/L levels. Accordingly, the use of biochar in water treatment applications where granular activated carbon (GAC) is economically or logistically infeasible is gaining interest. Monitoring treatment systems for individual MPs require laboratory analytical techniques that are typically cost-prohibitive and impractical for low-resource settings. Therefore, identification of surrogate parameters(s) for adsorbent bed life that can be measured inexpensively and in the field is a high priority. Background dissolved organic matter (DOM) is ubiquitous in natural and anthropogenic waters at concentrations typically 1,000 to 100,000 that of MPs. Some constituents of DOM foul the adsorbent and reduce bed life for removal of target contaminants. Aromatic DOM foulants absorb ultraviolet light at a wavelength of 254 nm (UVA(254)). Because DOM fouling directly affects MP adsorption capacity and DOM is a bulk water parameter that can be quantified using relatively inexpensive and portable instruments, it could be exploited as a surrogate for monitoring biochar adsorber bed life under field conditions. The objective of this study was to quantify removal of MPs from waters containing different types and concentrations of background DOM (surface water, wastewater, dump leachate) and thus exhibiting different UVA(254) breakthrough profiles in bench-scale column experiments. Breakthrough profiles of weakly to moderately adsorbing MPs, including herbicides, pharmaceuticals and personal care products, and perfluoroalkyl acids, were collected using biochars generated under different pyrolysis conditions and a commercial GAC as a performance benchmark. Optimal conditions for biochar water treatment include using biochar produced from wood at >= 850 degrees C under slightly aerobic conditions, empty bed contact times of >= 30 min, and upstream treatment processes to reduce DOM. Relative UVA(254) breakthrough (C/C-0) up to 0.6-0.9 corresponded to >= 90% MP removal for most MP-water combinations studied.

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