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  4. Elimination of Organic Micropollutants in a Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant Upgraded with a Full-Scale Post-Ozonation Followed by Sand Filtration
 
research article

Elimination of Organic Micropollutants in a Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant Upgraded with a Full-Scale Post-Ozonation Followed by Sand Filtration

Hollender, Juliane
•
Zimmermann, Saskia G.  
•
Koepke, Stephan
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2009
Environmental Science & Technology

The removal efficiency for 220 micropollutants was studied at the scale of a municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) upgraded with post-ozonation followed by sand filtration. During post-ozonation, compounds with activated aromatic moieties, amino functions, or double bonds such as sulfamethoxazole, diclofenac, or carbamazepine with second-order rate constants for the reaction with ozone >10(4) M-1 s(-1) at pH 7 (fastreacting) were eliminated to concentrations below the detection limit for an ozone dose of 0.47 g O-3 g(-1) dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Compounds more resistant to oxidation by ozone such as atenolol and benzotriazole were increasingly eliminated with increasing ozone doses, resulting in >85% removal for a medium ozone dose (similar to 0.6 g O-3 g(-1) DOC). Only a few micropollutants such as some X-ray contrast media and triazine herbicides with second-order rate constants <10(2) M-1 s(-1) (slowly reacting) persisted to a large extent. With a medium ozone dose, only 11 micropollutants of 55 detected in the secondary effluent were found at > 100 ng L-1. The combination of reaction kinetics and reactor hydraulics, based on laboratory and full-scale date, enabled a quantification of the results by model calculations. This conceptual approach allows a direct upscaling from laboratory- to full-scale systems and can be applied to other similar systems. The carcinogenic by-products N-nitrosodimethylamine (NOMA),(<= 14 ng L-1) and bromate (<10 mu g L-1) were produced during ozonation, however their concentrations were below or in the range of the drinking water standards. Furthermore, it could be demonstrated that biological sand filtration is an efficient additional barrier for the elimination of biodegradable compounds formed during ozonation such as NOMA. The energy requirement for the additional post-ozonation step is about 0.035 kWh m(-3), which corresponds to 12% of a typical medium-sized nutrient removal plant (5 g DOC m(-3)).

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/es9014629
Web of Science ID

WOS:000270594900046

Author(s)
Hollender, Juliane
Zimmermann, Saskia G.  
Koepke, Stephan
Krauss, Martin
McArdell, Christa S.
Ort, Christoph
Singer, Heinz
von Gunten, Urs  
Siegrist, Hansruedi
Date Issued

2009

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume

43

Start page

7862

End page

7869

Subjects

N-Nitrosodimethylamine Ndma

•

Personal Care Products

•

Drinking-Water

•

Advanced Oxidation

•

Activated Carbon

•

By-Product

•

Pharmaceuticals

•

Ozone

•

Removal

•

Disinfection

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LTQE  
Available on Infoscience
July 1, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/69164
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