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1.
In this work, the biodegradability of wastewater from a slaughterhouse located in Ke?an, Turkey, was studied under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. A very high total COD content of 7230 mg dm?3 was found, due to an inefficient blood recovery system. Low BOD5/COD ratio, high organic nitrogen and soluble COD contents, were in accordance with a high blood content. A respirometry test for COD fractionation showed a very low readily biodegradable fraction (SS) of 2%, a rapidly hydrolysable fraction (SH) of 51%, a slowly hydrolysable fraction (XS) of 33% and an inert fraction of 6%. Kinetic analysis revealed that hydrolysis rates were much slower than these of domestic sewage. The results underlined the need for an anaerobic stage prior to aerobic treatment. Tests with an anaerobic batch reactor indicated efficient COD degradation, up to around 80% removal. Further anaerobic degradation of the remaining COD was much slower and resulted in the build up of inert COD compounds generated as part of the metabolic activities in the anaerobic reactor. Accordingly, it is suggested that an appropriate combination of anaerobic and aerobic reactors would have to limit anaerobic degradation to around 80% of the tCOD and an effluent concentration above 1000 mg dm?3, for the optimum operation of the following aerobic stage. © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

2.
In this study, we investigate factors that can affect nitrification and denitrification in a moving bed biofilm system, treating partly stabilized landfill leachate. The optimization of biological treatment by means of controlled ozonation is additionally evaluated. Results obtained with a laboratory-scale, continuous-flow biofilm system suggest that nitrogen removal can be limited by the low influent biodegradable substrate concentrations, and that autotrophic nitrification can be adversely impacted by the high alkalinity buffer and ammonium/ammonia concentration. Our results suggest an optimum ozone dosage as high as 0.5 g/L O3 can be required to effectively decrease the effluent soluble COD concentration and pH profile in the aerobic reactors, improve the biodegradable COD production from inert compounds, and induce chemical nitrification in the system. The specific cost of ozonation evaluated is 0.36–0.73 euro/m3 with 911 mg/L average effluent soluble COD measured in the biofilm system.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: Ozonation of complex industrial park wastewater was carried out in a semi‐batch reactor. The variation of wastewater characteristics was evaluated based on the analysis of 5‐day biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5) concentration, BOD5/chemical oxygen demand (COD) ratio, COD fractionation, and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) molecular size distribution before and after ozonation. RESULTS: The experimental results indicated that low efficiency of COD removal with increasing tendency of BOD5 concentration generally appeared after ozonation. Also, the BOD5/COD ratio increased from an initial of 0.27 to a maximum of 0.38. The COD fractionation tests revealed that most of the inert soluble COD was transformed to biodegradable soluble COD at 30 min of reaction time. Additionally, the DOC molecular size distribution tests showed that the fraction larger than 500 kDa was significantly decreased and the fraction smaller than 2 kDa was increased when the reaction time was prolonged to 240 min. CONCLUSION: This study verified that partial oxidation of the complex industrial park wastewater by ozonation could enhance wastewater biodegradability. The biodegradability enhancement was primarily because the inert soluble COD fraction was converted to the biodegradable soluble COD and the high molecular weight fraction of DOC was shifted toward the low molecular weight fraction. Copyright © 2009 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

4.
Ozonation was tested on selected streams of cotton finishing textile plant wastewater for optimizing chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal. For this purpose, significant COD fractions in the wastewater were experimentally identified and the effect of ozone on these fractions was investigated. Ozonation experiments were performed with a 1 dm3 sample volume. Ozone treatment of batches of raw wastewater provided, at a rate of 62 mg min?1 and a gas feeding time of 15 min, achieved complete colour removal but only 21% COD reduction. Increasing the feeding time to 30 min slightly increased the COD removal to 32%. At this feeding time, removal of the readily biodegradable COD was 60%, but soluble inert COD reduction remained at 16%, indicating selective preference of ozone for simpler compounds. At low concentrations, ozone was mainly influential on soluble COD compounds. Longer feeding times also affected particulate compounds, resulting in the solubilization of the COD fractions. Pre‐ozonation of the dye‐house wastewater, as a segregated stream, proved much more effective in the breakdown of refractory organic compounds, rendering the overall plant effluent more amenable to biological treatment. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

5.
The ozonation of wastewater supplied from a treatment plant (Samples A and B) and dye‐bath effluent (Sample C) from a dyeing and finishing mill and acid dye solutions in a semi‐batch reactor has been examined to explore the impact of ozone dose, pH, and initial dye concentration. Results revealed that the apparent rate constants were raised with increases in applied ozone dose and pH, and decreases in initial dye concentration. While the color removal efficiencies of both wastewater Samples A and C for 15 min ozonation at high ozone dosage were 95 and 97%, respectively, these were 81 and 87%, respectively at low ozone dosage. The chemical oxygen demand (COD) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) removal efficiencies at several ozone dose applications for a 15 min ozonation time were in the ranges of 15–46% and 10–20%, respectively for Sample A and 15–33% and 9–19% respectively for Sample C. Ozone consumption per unit color, COD and DOC removal at any time was found to be almost the same while the applied ozone dose was different. Ozonation could improve the BOD5 (biological oxygen demand) COD ratio of Sample A by 1.6 times with 300 mg dm?3 ozone consumption. Ozonation of acid dyes was a pseudo‐first order reaction with respect to dye. Increases in dye concentration increased specific ozone consumption. Specific ozone consumption for Acid Red 183 (AR‐183) dye solution with a concentration of 50 mg dm?3 rose from 0.32 to 0.72 mg‐O3 per mg dye decomposed as the dye concentration was increased to 500 mg dm?3. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

6.
The efficiency of two AOPs operating at room conditions of pressure and temperature, ozonation (single and catalytic over the laboratorial Mn–Ce–O and the commercial N-150—Fe2O3/MnOx) and Fenton's process (homogeneous and over Fe–Ce–O), was simultaneously checked for the remediation of a phenolic mixture. Gathering up former individual results pointing out as most suitable treatments those involving solid catalysts, either for ozonation or Fenton's, a global conclusion elects this last process as the more interesting for industrial applications. In fact, the lower retention time required by H2O2+Fe–Ce–O 70/30 to attain an easily biodegradable effluent makes this technology truly attractive for in-situ remediation of this specific wastewater. These findings were mostly driven by the comparative ability to transform the non-biodegradable raw effluent into streams more amenable to further bio-processing. In this regard, biological parameters superposed chemical COD degradation within the ultimate selection reasons. Indeed, in all cases COD limits were not reached and a subsequent biological treatment is required. Despite COD removal for catalytic ozonation showed to be higher than for heterogeneous Fenton's (63% and 50%), BOD5/COD was contrarily favorable to Fenton's, which immediately conducted to a biodegradable mixture in the first minutes (0.78 in 10 min) while ozonation took more than 1 h to impart a biodegradable character.  相似文献   

7.
ABSTRACT

In this study, an ozonation process was used to increase biodegradability of textile wastewater by considering chemical oxygen demand (COD) and color removal. Response surface methodology was applied in order to determine the significance of independent variables which are initial pH, reaction time and ozone dose. While a biological oxygen demand (BOD)/COD rate of 0.315 was obtained at optimum conditions, which are pH 9, 75 min of reaction time and 26 mg/L ozone dose, color and COD removal was obtained at 74% and 39%, respectively. BOD/COD ratio value increased from 0.18 to 0.32 by ozonation process. In addition, k coefficient for BOD also increased from 0.21 to 0.30 d?1.  相似文献   

8.
The study investigates the effect of sludge ozonation on solid matter species, disintegration properties, sludge components, and solubilization characteristics under different operating conditions. Ozonation of surplus activated sludge samples taken from the secondary settling tank of a domestic wastewater treatment plant indicates that soluble nitrogen, phosphorus and COD concentrations proliferate as a consequence of extending the ozone feeding time. A steady increase both in soluble nitrogen concentration and ratio of organic phosphorus to soluble phosphorus is observed through ozonation where specific ozone doses range between 4 and 11 mg O3/g SS. Combined treatment of chemical oxidation and aerobic biodegradation to surplus activated sludge is also applied to improve the biodegradability of organic matter by partial chemical oxidative pretreatment with as little specific ozone consumption as possible. The partial oxidation by integrated ozonation is operated as a pre-oxidation step for the subsequent biological degradation, due to the fact that the competition with biological degradation in removing biodegradable organic compounds is avoided and most probably a more biodegradable sludge composition is obtained by means of ozonation. Combined treatment of chemical oxidation and aerobic biodegradation conducted to scrutinize the synergic effect of the coupled treatment system reveals that TS and COD removal efficiencies of ozonated sludge samples cannot be improved beyond the third aerobic biodegradation step.  相似文献   

9.
BACKGROUND: Carpet manufacturing and finishing with purely synthetic fibers has received relatively little attention, compared to other textile processing types. This study evaluates the biodegradation kinetics of organic compounds generated from polyamide‐based carpet manufacturing. RESULTS: Experiments were conducted on pre‐washing and dyeing/softening wastewater effluents. Model evaluation of oxygen uptake rate profiles with dual hydrolysis kinetics revealed that the soluble slowly hydrolysable chemical oxygen demand (COD) was the major fraction, constituting nearly 97% of the biodegradable COD and 78% of total COD content. Degradation of the slowly hydrolysable COD fraction was characterized with a rate coefficient of 0.72 day?1, a significant rate limiting step for substrate utilization. Model simulation of system performance indicated that an unusually long hydraulic retention time was required for an activated sludge system to reduce the effluent COD concentration. CONCLUSION: Compared to domestic wastewater, two additional hydrolysable COD fractions with different degradation kinetics were characterized. The dyeing and softening step had the highest slowly biodegradable organic matter content, with the lowest degradation rate. Simulation results showed that soluble slowly hydrolysable COD degradation did not cause any problem in terms of effluent quality. With the system operated under reduced solids retention time, the effluent COD quality was significantly influenced by the slow hydrolysis rate of soluble hydrolysable matter. Copyright © 2007 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Ozone is applied in wastewater treatment for effluent water quality improvement (post‐ozonation) as well as for excess sludge reduction (in the recirculation line). There is some evidence that ozone dosed directly to aerobic biooxidation (ABO) process enhances degradation of recalcitrant compounds into intermediates, following their biodegradation in the same reactor. However, no information regarding the influence of ozone on sludge yield in this system was found. Therefore, the current work aimed to evaluate the effect of ozone on the sludge yield when ozone is dosed directly to the ABO process. In addition, batch and continuous treatment schemes for phenolic wastewater treatment are compared. RESULTS: The results revealed that an optimal ozone dose of ~30 mgO3 L?1 day?1 reduced the sludge yield by ~50%, while effluent water quality in terms of total chemical oxygen demand (TCOD), compared with a conventional ABO process, was improved by 35.5 ± 3.6%. Slight improvement in soluble COD removal at the same ozone dose was also detected. The toxicity of effluent water was reduced as the ozone dose was increased. CONCLUSIONS: In an integrated ozonation‐ABO process it is possible to simultaneously reduce sludge yield and to improve effluent water quality, as COD and toxicity are reduced. Copyright © 2011 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

11.
The continuous treatment of domestic wastewater by an activated sludge process and by an integrated biological–chemical (ozone) oxidation process were studied in this work. Chemical oxygen demand (COD), biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), absorbance at 254 nm (UV254) and nitrogenous compound content were the parameters followed in order to evaluate the performance of the two processes. Experimental data showed that both UV254 and COD reductions are improved in the combined biological–chemical oxidation procedure. Thus, reductions of 59.1% and 37.2% corresponding to COD and UV254, respectively were observed after the biological process (hydraulic retention time = 5 h; mixed liquor volatile suspended solids concentration = 3142 g m−3) compared with 71.0% and 78.4% obtained when a post‐ozonation step ( D O3 = 41.7 g m−3) was included. During conventional activated sludge treatment, appropriate nitrification levels are only achieved with high hydraulic retention time and/or biomass concentration. Ozonation after the secondary treatment, however, allows improved nitrogen content reduction with total nitrite elimination. Post‐ozonation also leads to a higher biodegradability of the treated wastewater. Thus, the ultimate BOD/COD ratio goes from 0.16 after biological oxidation to 0.34 after post‐ozonation with 41.7 g O3 m−3. © 1999 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

12.
A simulated textile effluent (STE) was generated for use in laboratory biotreatment studies; this effluent contained one reactive azo dye, PROCION Red H‐E7B (1.5 g dm−3); sizing agent, Tissalys 150 (1.9 g dm−3); sodium chloride (1.5 g dm−3) and acetic acid (0.53 g dm−3) together with nutrients and trace elements, giving a mean COD of 3480 mg dm−3. An inclined tubular anaerobic digester (ITD) was operated for 9 months on the STE and a UASB reactor for 3 months. For a 57 day period anaerobic effluent from two reactors, a UASB and an ITD, was mixed and treated in an aerobic stage. In days 77–247 68% of the true colour of PROCION Red H‐E7B was removed by anaerobic treatment with no colour removal aerobically and up to 37% COD was removed anaerobically, with a corresponding BOD removal of 71%. For combined anaerobic and aerobic treatment a mean COD removal of 57% and BOD removal of 86% was achieved. Operation of the ITD at a 2.8 day HRT (volumetric loading rate (B v) 1.24 g COD dm−3day−1) and the UASB at a 2 day HRT (B v 1.74 g COD dm−3day−1) gave comparable COD removals but the UASB gave better true colour removal. Effluent from the combined process operating on this simulated waste still contained an average 1500 mg COD dm−3, and further treatment would be required to meet consent standards. © 1999 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

13.
The study involved characterization of denim‐processing wastewaters, mainly to generate the necessary experimental data for the modelling and evaluation of the activated sludge process. The striking feature of the wastewater quality was the excessive suspended solids content requiring effective removal before biological treatment. COD fractionation was, however, typical for a textile effluent in general, with a biodegradable fraction of 90%, a readily biodegradable COD ratio of 20%, a predominantly soluble slowly biodegradable fraction of 55–60% and negligible particulate inert COD. Hydrolysis was identified as the significant step in the biodegradation kinetics with rate coefficients quite specific to plant operation. Evaluation of the hydrolysis kinetics showed that the magnitude of the slowly biodegradable COD could be reduced with a higher hydraulic detention time, effectively improving the quality of the soluble effluent. © 2001 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

14.
Hydroxyl radical (HO?) production during ozonation of municipal wastewater was investigated with and without liquid or solid-phase promoters. For liquid-phase promoters, an “ozone dose threshold” was observed, below which addition of H2O2 yielded no discernible increase in the rate of HO? production. This threshold occurs because ozonation of bulk organics in wastewater promotes HO? due to the presence of ambient promoters. Although solid-phase catalysts are reported to promote oxidation of contaminants, ozonation of effluent over TiO2 or GAC was no more effective on trace organic removal than over inert surfaces.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of chemical oxidation by applying ozonation, combination of ozone and hydrogen peroxide and Fenton's processes for decolorization and residual chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal of biologically pretreated pulp and paper industry effluents. The batch tests were performed to determine the optimum operating conditions including pH, O3, H2O2, and Fe2+ dosages. H2O2 addition reduced the reaction times for the same ozone dosages; however combinations of ozone/hydrogen peroxide were only faintly more effective than ozone alone for COD and color removals. In the Fenton‘s oxidation studies, the removal efficiencies of COD, color and ultraviolet absorbance at 254 nm (UV254) for biologically treated pulp and paper industry effluents were found to be about 83, 95, and 89%, respectively. Experimental studies indicated that Fenton oxidation was a more effective process for the reduction of COD, color, and UV254when compared to ozonation and ozone/hydrogen peroxide combination. Fenton oxidation was found to have less operating cost for color removal from wastewater per cubic meter than the cost for ozone and ozone/hydrogen peroxide applications.  相似文献   

16.
The advanced chemical oxidation of raw and biologically pretreated textile wastewater by (1) ozonation, (2) H2O2 /UV − C oxidation and (3) sequential application of ozonation followed by H2O2 /UV − C oxidation was investigated at the natural pH values (8 and 11) of the textile effluents for 1 h. Analysis of the reduction in the pollution load was followed by total environmental parameters such as TOC, COD, UV–VIS absorption kinetics and the biodegradability factor, fB. The successive treatment combination, where a preliminary ozonation step was carried out prior to H2O2 /UV − C oxidation without changing the total treatment time, enhanced the COD and TOC removal efficiency of the H2O2 /UV − C oxidation by a factor of 13 and 4, respectively, for the raw wastewater. In the case of biotreated textile effluent, a preliminary ozonation step increased COD removal of the H2O2 /UV − C treatment system from 15% to 62%, and TOC removal from 0% to 34%. However, the sequential process did not appear to be more effective than applying a single ozonation step in terms of TOC abatement rates. Enhancement of the biodegradability factor (fB) was more pronounced for the biologically pretreated wastewater with an almost two‐fold increase for the optimized Advanced Oxidation Technologies (AOTs). For H2O2 /UV − C oxidation of raw textile wastewater, apparent zero order COD removal rate constants (kapp), and the second order OH· formation rates (ri) have been calculated. © 2001 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

17.
The treatment of a segregated textile wastewater containing reactive dyes was investigated in two continuous‐flow process trains using ozonation and biological processes. The degree of decolorization and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) removal achieved by ozonation followed by aerobic treatment (two‐stage) was compared with that found when an anaerobic and aerobic pretreatment was added (four‐stage). Although the biological pretreatment reduced color by ~70%, similar amounts of ozone were required in both trains to achieve high degrees of overall removal of color and DOC. In both trains, ozonation increased biodegradability in the following aerobic reactor, however, in order to reach ~80% overall DOC removal, a specific ozone absorption (A*) of ~6 gO3 gDOCo?1 was required and >50% of the DOC was mineralized in the ozone reactor. A comparison of cost estimates based on investment and operating costs for the process alternatives showed that a four‐stage train would reduce costs only if it enabled a decrease in A* to less than 2 gO3 gDOCo?1. Difficulties in comparing treatment processes for segregated vs full‐stream wastewaters are discussed. Copyright © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: Traditional treatment systems failed to achieve efficient degradation of anthraquinone dye intermediates at high loading. Thus, an airlift internal loop reactor (AILR) in combination with the TiO2‐photocatalytic ozonation (TiO2/UV/O3) process was investigated for the degradaton of 1‐amino‐ 4‐bromoanthraquinone‐2‐ sulfonic acid (ABAS). RESULTS: The AILR using Sphingomonas xenophaga as inoculum and granular activated carbon (GAC) as biocarrier, could run steadily for 4 months at 1000 mg L?1 of the influent ABAS. The efficiencies of ABAS decolorization and chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal in AILR reached about 90% and 50% in 12 h, respectively. However, when the influent ABAS concentration was further increased, a yellow intermediate with maximum absorbance at 447 nm appeared in AILR, resulting in the decrease of the decolorization and COD removal efficiencies. Advanced treatment of AILR effluent indicated that TiO2/UV/O3 process more significantly improved the mineralization rate of ABAS bio‐decolorization products with over 90% TOC removal efficiency, compared with O3, TiO2/UV and UV/O3 processes. Furthermore, the release efficiencies of Br? and SO42? could reach 84.5% and 80.2% during TiO2/UV/O3 treatment, respectively, when 91.5% TOC removal was achieved in 2 h. CONCLUSION: The combination of AILR and TiO2/UV/O3 was an economic and efficient system for the treatment of ABAS wastewater. © 2012 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

19.
This work deals with the biodegradability and toxicity of three non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) (diclofenac, ibuprofen and naproxen) treated by ozonation. The results show that the total removal of 200 mg L?1 of diclofenac and 100 mg L?1 of naproxen is possible using an ozone dose of 0.20 and 0.04 g L?1, respectively. For 200 mg L?1 of ibuprofen, 90% removal is achieved using an ozone dose of 2.3 g L?1. The BOD5/COD ratio, the Zahn-Wallens test and EC50 toxicity test (Microtox) are chosen as biological and toxicity indicators of NSAID intermediates. The evolution of BOD5/COD ratio during 1 hour of treatment is evaluated and the results show that ozonation improves the biodegradability for the three NSAID treated solution. The Zahn-Wellens test for diclofenac and ibuprofen solutions shows that biological mineralization, after 28 days, is higher for diclofenac than for ibuprofen solution. According to the Microtox test, the treatment with ozone removes the toxicity of the naproxen solution. Taking into account the results obtained with the biocompatibility tests it could be assumed that ozonation is an adequate treatment for removal NSAID in aquatic medium, and the ozonated effluents could be post-treated in a biological wastewater facility.  相似文献   

20.
Two-stage biological treatment schemes are often prescribed for pulp and paper mill effluents with high COD concentrations, in order to meet effluent standards. Recent conceptual developments in biological treatment of wastewaters indicate that the stoichiometry of the inert organic components is the key issue in performance predictions and the kinetics of degradable organic fraction play a relatively less important role in the compliance of effluent limitations. Besides, the differentiation between initially inert COD and inert metabolic products is very important in two-stage systems, as what is biodegradable for one phase may become non-biodegradable for the next phase in which a different microbial community is sustained. In this study a pulp and paper mill effluent is characterized in terms of its inert COD fractions and the changes induced by two-stage biological treatment to these fractions are observed. © 1998 SCI  相似文献   

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