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Removal of pharmaceuticals from wastewater by biological processes,hydrodynamic cavitation and UV treatment
Authors:Mojca Zupanc  Tina Kosjek  Martin Petkov?ek  Matev? Dular  Boris Kompare  Brane ?irok  ?eljko Bla?eka  Ester Heath
Institution:1. Jo?ef Stefan Institute, Department of Environmental Sciences, Ljubljana, Slovenia;2. Jo?ef Stefan International Postgraduate School, Ljubljana, Slovenia;3. Institute for Ecological Engineering, Maribor, Slovenia;4. Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia;5. Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Abstract:To augment the removal of pharmaceuticals different conventional and alternative wastewater treatment processes and their combinations were investigated. We tested the efficiency of (1) two distinct laboratory scale biological processes: suspended activated sludge and attached-growth biomass, (2) a combined hydrodynamic cavitation–hydrogen peroxide process and (3) UV treatment. Five pharmaceuticals were chosen including ibuprofen, naproxen, ketoprofen, carbamazepine and diclofenac, and an active metabolite of the lipid regulating agent clofibric acid.Biological treatment efficiency was evaluated using lab-scale suspended activated sludge and moving bed biofilm flow-through reactors, which were operated under identical conditions in respect to hydraulic retention time, working volume, concentration of added pharmaceuticals and synthetic wastewater composition. The suspended activated sludge process showed poor and inconsistent removal of clofibric acid, carbamazepine and diclofenac, while ibuprofen, naproxen and ketoprofen yielded over 74% removal. Moving bed biofilm reactors were filled with two different types of carriers i.e. Kaldnes K1 and Mutag BioChip? and resulted in higher removal efficiencies for ibuprofen and diclofenac. Augmentation and consistency in the removal of diclofenac were observed in reactors using Mutag BioChip? carriers (85% ± 10%) compared to reactors using Kaldnes carriers and suspended activated sludge (74% ± 22% and 48% ± 19%, respectively). To enhance the removal of pharmaceuticals hydrodynamic cavitation with hydrogen peroxide process was evaluated and optimal conditions for removal were established regarding the duration of cavitation, amount of added hydrogen peroxide and initial pressure, all of which influence the efficiency of the process. Optimal parameters resulted in removal efficiencies between 3–70%. Coupling the attached-growth biomass biological treatment, hydrodynamic cavitation/hydrogen peroxide process and UV treatment resulted in removal efficiencies of >90% for clofibric acid and >98% for carbamazepine and diclofenac, while the remaining compounds were reduced to levels below the LOD. For ibuprofen, naproxen, ketoprofen and diclofenac the highest contribution to overall removal was attributed to biological treatment, for clofibric acid UV treatment was the most efficient, while for carbamazepine hydrodynamic cavitation/hydrogen peroxide process and UV treatment were equally efficient.
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