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  4. Detrimental vs. beneficial influence of ions during solar (SODIS) and photo-Fenton disinfection of E. coli in water: (Bi)carbonate, chloride, nitrate and nitrite effects
 
research article

Detrimental vs. beneficial influence of ions during solar (SODIS) and photo-Fenton disinfection of E. coli in water: (Bi)carbonate, chloride, nitrate and nitrite effects

Rommozzi, Elena
•
Giannakis, Stefanos
•
Giovannetti, Rita
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August 5, 2020
Applied Catalysis B-Environmental

In this work, we studied the effect of inorganic ions occurring in natural waters on E. coli inactivation by solar and photo-Fenton processes, two crucial methods for drinking water treatment in sunny or developing countries. HCO3-, Cl-, SO42-, NO3-, NO2- and NH4+ were assessed at relevant concentrations for their inhibiting or facilitating role. The inactivation enhancement during solar disinfection (SODIS) was mainly attributed to the generation of HO center dot radicals produced during by excitation of NO3-, NO2-, while the HO center dot of photo-Fenton may be transformed into other radical species in presence of ions. Natural organic matter (NOM) was found to enhance both processes but also to hinder most of the enhancing ions, except for NO2-; modeling with the APEX software unveiled the inter-relations in the presence of NOM, and the possible inactivation activity by NO2 center dot. The photo-Fenton inactivation was more significantly enhanced by ions than SODIS (besides the case of NO3-, NO2-), but both processes were found robust enough.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.apcatb.2020.118877
Web of Science ID

WOS:000526110500032

Author(s)
Rommozzi, Elena
Giannakis, Stefanos
Giovannetti, Rita
Vione, Davide
Pulgarin, Cesar  
Date Issued

2020-08-05

Published in
Applied Catalysis B-Environmental
Volume

270

Article Number

118877

Subjects

Chemistry, Physical

•

Engineering, Environmental

•

Engineering, Chemical

•

Chemistry

•

Engineering

•

solar disinfection

•

photo-fenton process

•

bacteria

•

inorganic ions

•

inactivation modeling

•

dissolved organic-matter

•

compound parabolic collector

•

advanced oxidation processes

•

escherichia-coli

•

rate constants

•

inactivation efficiency

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bacterial inactivation

•

hydroxyl radicals

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sulfate radicals

•

aqueous-solution

Note

This is an open access article under the CC BY license.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GPAO  
Available on Infoscience
May 2, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/168531
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