Browsing by Author "Salazar-Gonzalez, R."
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- ItemComprehensive evaluation of a novel pilot-scale UVA-LED photoreactor for water treatment applications: Characterization, catalytic efficiency, energy performance and economic viability(2024) Cabrera-Reina, A.; Salazar-Gonzalez, R.; Marugan, J.; Perez, J. A. Sanchez; Cuevas, S. Miralles-A comprehensive assessment was conducted on a novel pilot plant employing a tubular photo-reactor configuration integrated with UVA-LED technology for advanced municipal wastewater treatment applications. The plant consists of eight UVA-LED strips (150 LEDs/strip, 348-400 nm with peak emission at 370 nm) achieving a maximum irradiance of 28.1 W/m(2) at 100 % power of the LED, symmetrically distributed across two borosilicate tubes. The iron concentration (0.025-0.100 mM) and UVA-LED irradiance (1.4-28.1 W/m(2)) combined effect on the photo-Fenton process efficiency was thoroughly examined in synthetic tap water and synthetic municipal wastewater treatment plant (MWWTP) secondary effluent using sulfamethoxazole as model microcontaminant. In general, an LED intensity threshold from which process efficiency reaches a plateau maximum value was found. The determination of the electrical energy per order (EEO) showed higher energy efficiencies as LED intensity decreases, iron concentration increases, and the water matrix is simpler. The lowest EEO obtained was 0.009 kWh/m3 & sdot;order for 0.10 mM iron concentration in synthetic MWWTP secondary effluent at 5 % LED intensity. The economic study revealed that the weight of operating costs is more significant than the weight of investment costs, regardless of the selected operating conditions. Working with an iron concentration of 0.10 mM helps reduce the total costs, while operating either under excess LED intensity or insufficient LED intensity negatively impacts the total treatment cost. The lowest treatment cost (0.19 /m3) was obtained with 0.10 mM iron concentration at only 10 % LED intensity. A comparison with the same process driven by natural solar radiation in a raceway pond reactor demonstrated the feasibility of the novel photo-reactor design in terms of treatment cost.
- ItemExploring the scalability of solar-activated persulfate with iron-EDDS in raceway pond reactors for advanced wastewater treatment(2023) Miralles-Cuevas, S.; Salazar-Gonzalez, R.; Cabrera-Reina, A.In this study, the removal of microcontaminants (MCs) by the activation of persulfate (PS) with Fe(III)-EDDS under natural solar radiation in a low-cost raceway pond reactor (RPR) was investigated. The primary focus was to evaluate the effect of the Fe(III)-EDDS molar ratio, initial iron concentration, PS concentration, and initial pH on process performance while using sulfamethoxazole (SMX) and carbamazepine (CBZ) as model MCs. The investigation encompassed three different water matrices: natural water, synthetic municipal wastewater treatment plant (MWWTP) secondary effluent, and actual MWWTP secondary effluent. During experiments in natural water, it was found that 0.1 mM Fe(III) at a 1:2 molar ratio and 0.2 mM Fe(III) at a 1:1 molar ratio resulted in the most adequate operational conditions. Further experiments revealed a general decrease in process efficiency due to water matrix effects; however, this could be compensated by increasing the initial PS concentration and decreasing the initial operation pH. For example, the use of 0.2 mM Fe(III) at a 1:1 Fe(III):EDDS molar ratio, with 2 mM PS at pH 6, allowed for an 80% removal of the MCs sum in approximately 20 min, along with a significant decrease in chronic toxicity (Selenatrum Capricornutum) when working with actual waters. Nonetheless, the final experiment, focused on simultaneous MCs removal and wild bacteria inactivation in actual MWWTP secondary effluent, showed only a 1.6-1.8 log reduction of Escherichia coli, total coliforms, and Enterococcus faecalis. As such, further studies about the solar/Fe(III)-EDDS/PS process are needed to explore new strategies that improve its disinfection efficiency.