Advanced oxidation processes for industrial effluent treatment

Author(s):  
Swati Singh ◽  
Anurag Garg
Author(s):  
Azmi Aris ◽  
Muhammad Noor Hazwan Jusoh ◽  
Nurul Shakila Ahmad Abdul Wahab

This chapter presents a review on limited studies that have been conducted using advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) in treating biologically treated palm oil mill effluent. Palm oil mill effluent is the byproducts of palm oil production that is normally treated using a series of biological processes. However, despite being treated for a long period of retention time, the effluent still possesses high concentration of organics, nutrients, and highly colored, and will pollute the environment if not treated further. Advanced oxidation processes that utilized hydroxyl radicals as their oxidizing agents have the potential of further treating the biologically treated POME. Fenton oxidation, photocatalysis, and cavitation are the main AOPs that have been studied in polishing the biologically treated POME. Depending on the experimental conditions, the removal of organics, in terms of COD, TOC, and color, could reach up to more than 90%. Nevertheless, each of this process has its own limitations and further studies are needed to overcome these limitations.


2013 ◽  
Vol 837 ◽  
pp. 271-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Dartu ◽  
Carmen Zaharia ◽  
Gabriela Carja

This work reports hydrotalcite and zinc-substituted hydrotalcite (MeAlLDHs) anionic clays as novel catalytic formulations for some environmental applications regarding specific industrial coloured effluents. In this context, layered double hydroxides, covered or with tailored compositions, were synthesized, characterized using advanced analytical analysis techniques (XRD, FTIR, SEM) and tested in specific environmental applications. More specifically, LDHs samples were tested as catalysts for different treatments of coloured effluents, especially some advanced oxidation processes (i.e.heterogeneous advanced oxidation processes with H2O2of Orange 16 dye-containing effluent). The influence of some operating factors such as catalyst type, concentration of hydrogen peroxide, presence of ferrous ions or UV light, contact time was studied, and the adequate operating values were established. Results show that Orange 16 removal is more than 70%, in specific operating conditions, for two of new tested materials (ZnAlLDH 3:1, and MgAlLDH 3:1). Moreover, the action of UV radiation was found efficient in decomposition of Orange 16 dye in the presence of all four tested catalytic materials, improving with more than 40-50% the color removal.


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