Two solar driven Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOPs), namely sunlight/H2O2 and sunlight/peracetic acid (PAA), were investigated for the inactivation of two bacterial families (Escherichia coli and Enterococci) in real urban wastewater. Preliminary lab scale experiments were performed by using a solar simulator in order to evaluate the proper initial dose of H2O2 and PAA, respectively. According to the results achieved, 50 and 100âEUR...mgâEUR...Lâ^'1 of H2O2 and 4 and 8âEUR...mgâEUR...Lâ^'1 of PAA were chosen for the subsequent pilot scale experiments in a Compound Parabolic Collector (CPC) based reactor. The sunlight/PAA process resulted in a higher inactivation rate (3.52 log units of E. coli and 4.50 log units of Enterococci with an initial dose of 8âEUR...mg PAA Lâ^'1) compared to sunlight/H2O2 process (3.13 log units of E. coli and 2.45 log units of Enterococci with an initial dose of 100âEUR...mg H2O2 Lâ^'1) after 120âEUR...min of solar irradiation (7.42âEUR...kJâEUR...Lâ^'1 cumulative energy per unit of volume). It is noteworthy that significantly lower initial doses of PAA allowed to achieve a higher inactivation rate compared to H2O2, which makes sunlight/PAA an attractive option for wastewater disinfection in small communities.

Inactivation of Escherichia coli and Enterococci in urban wastewater by sunlight/PAA and sunlight/H2O2 processes

Fiorentino A;
2016

Abstract

Two solar driven Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOPs), namely sunlight/H2O2 and sunlight/peracetic acid (PAA), were investigated for the inactivation of two bacterial families (Escherichia coli and Enterococci) in real urban wastewater. Preliminary lab scale experiments were performed by using a solar simulator in order to evaluate the proper initial dose of H2O2 and PAA, respectively. According to the results achieved, 50 and 100âEUR...mgâEUR...Lâ^'1 of H2O2 and 4 and 8âEUR...mgâEUR...Lâ^'1 of PAA were chosen for the subsequent pilot scale experiments in a Compound Parabolic Collector (CPC) based reactor. The sunlight/PAA process resulted in a higher inactivation rate (3.52 log units of E. coli and 4.50 log units of Enterococci with an initial dose of 8âEUR...mg PAA Lâ^'1) compared to sunlight/H2O2 process (3.13 log units of E. coli and 2.45 log units of Enterococci with an initial dose of 100âEUR...mg H2O2 Lâ^'1) after 120âEUR...min of solar irradiation (7.42âEUR...kJâEUR...Lâ^'1 cumulative energy per unit of volume). It is noteworthy that significantly lower initial doses of PAA allowed to achieve a higher inactivation rate compared to H2O2, which makes sunlight/PAA an attractive option for wastewater disinfection in small communities.
2016
Istituto di Ricerca sugli Ecosistemi Terrestri - IRET
Advanced Oxidation Processes; Compound Parabolic Collector (CPC); Hydrogen peroxide; Peracetic acid PAA); Solar-driven processes; Wastewater disinfection
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/374983
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