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Municipal anaerobic filter effluent treatment using advanced oxidation processes for potential use in unrestricted crop production
To meet wastewater treatment quality standards for reuse, integrating advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) with Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Systems (DEWATS) is promising. This study aimed to optimize AOPs (ozonolysis, UV photolysis, TiO2 photocatalysis) for polishing anaerobic filter (AF) effluent from DEWATS, as an alternative to constructed wetlands. Metrics included pathogen reduction efficiency, post-disinfection regrowth, and effects on physical parameters (pH, EC, turbidity), organic matter (soluble COD, BOD, DOC, humic), and nutrient concentration (ammonium, nitrates, ortho-P). Ozonolysis and TiO2 photocatalysis achieved a 6.4-log pathogen reduction, while UV photolysis achieved a 6-log. No pathogen regrowth occurred with ozonolysis, but TiO2 photocatalysis showed E. coli and Total coliforms regrowth of 2.5-log and 2.7-log, respectively. UV photolysis showed 0.5-log and 2.2-log regrowth for E. coli and Total coliforms, respectively. TiO2 photocatalysis significantly reduced BOD, soluble COD, humic substances, ortho-P, turbidity, and nitrates, while increasing pH, EC, ammonium, and DOC. Ozonolysis significantly lowered BOD, soluble COD, humics, and turbidity, but increased ortho-P, nitrates, pH, EC, ammonium, and DOC. UV-photolysis showed marginal reductions in BOD, nitrates, and turbidity, with increased EC, pH, ammonium, DOC, ortho-P, and humic levels. Ozonolysis emerged as the best AOP, demonstrating efficient effluent treatment with no pathogen regrowth.
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Municipal anaerobic filter effluent treatment using advanced oxidation processes for potential use in unrestricted crop production
To meet wastewater treatment quality standards for reuse, integrating advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) with Decentralized Wastewater Treatment Systems (DEWATS) is promising. This study aimed to optimize AOPs (ozonolysis, UV photolysis, TiO2 photocatalysis) for polishing anaerobic filter (AF) effluent from DEWATS, as an alternative to constructed wetlands. Metrics included pathogen reduction efficiency, post-disinfection regrowth, and effects on physical parameters (pH, EC, turbidity), organic matter (soluble COD, BOD, DOC, humic), and nutrient concentration (ammonium, nitrates, ortho-P). Ozonolysis and TiO2 photocatalysis achieved a 6.4-log pathogen reduction, while UV photolysis achieved a 6-log. No pathogen regrowth occurred with ozonolysis, but TiO2 photocatalysis showed E. coli and Total coliforms regrowth of 2.5-log and 2.7-log, respectively. UV photolysis showed 0.5-log and 2.2-log regrowth for E. coli and Total coliforms, respectively. TiO2 photocatalysis significantly reduced BOD, soluble COD, humic substances, ortho-P, turbidity, and nitrates, while increasing pH, EC, ammonium, and DOC. Ozonolysis significantly lowered BOD, soluble COD, humics, and turbidity, but increased ortho-P, nitrates, pH, EC, ammonium, and DOC. UV-photolysis showed marginal reductions in BOD, nitrates, and turbidity, with increased EC, pH, ammonium, DOC, ortho-P, and humic levels. Ozonolysis emerged as the best AOP, demonstrating efficient effluent treatment with no pathogen regrowth.
<p><fig><graphic></graphic></fig></p>
Municipal anaerobic filter effluent treatment using advanced oxidation processes for potential use in unrestricted crop production
Oluoch, Barnabas (author) / Musazura, William (author) / Otieno, Benton (author) / Ojwach, Stephen (author) / Odindo, Alfred (author)
Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A ; 59 ; 563-573
2024-12-05
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Advanced oxidation processes for effluent treatment plants
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