4.6 Article

Fate and toxicity of aircraft deicing fluid additives through anaerobic digest ion

Journal

WATER ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH
Volume 73, Issue 1, Pages 72-79

Publisher

WATER ENVIRONMENT FEDERATION
DOI: 10.2175/106143001X138714

Keywords

toxicity; aircraft deicing fluid; anaerobic; corrosion inhibitors; triazole

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Benzotriazole derivatives are widely used corrosion inhibitors and their fate during wastewater treatment processes, is unknown. The purpose of this research was to study the toxic effects and fate of the two commercially significant benzotriazole isomers, used in aircraft deicing fluids (4, and 5-, methylbenzotriazole [MeBT]) during anaerobic digestion. Experiments were executed in microcosms using mesophilic anaerobic biomass, co-digesting wastewater sludge and propylene glycol. Sorption of MeBT to digesting solids could be approximated with a. Freundlich model, and no, anaerobic breakdown of either MeBT isomer was defected. Digesters fed more than 300 mg/L MeBT responded with a significant decrease in methanogenic microbial activity and volatile solids production and a. concomitant increase in accumulation of volatile fatty acids. Direct microscopic measurements using fluorescent phylogenetic probes, applied to digesting biomass revealed that members of both Archaea. and Bacteria domains were sensitive to MeBT. Granular activated carbon (GAC) (volatile solids: GAC = 10%) reduced the apparent toxic effects of MeBT; GAC addition nearly restored the baseline activity of digesters fed MeBT (500 to 1000 mg/L).

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