scholarly journals Textile Wastewater Treatment in a Spinning Disc Reactor: Improved Performances—Experimental, Modeling and SVM Optimization

Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 2003
Author(s):  
Carmen Zaharia ◽  
Florin Leon ◽  
Silvia Curteanu ◽  
Eugenia Teodora Iacob-Tudose

The paper presents an experimental study regarding the treatment of a real textile wastewater using the spinning disc (SD) technology, either individually or associated with an advanced Fenton oxidation step. The SD efficiency was investigated by studying the color, suspended solids, or turbidity removals, at distinctive feeding flowrates (10–30 L/h) and disc rotating speeds (100–1500 rpm). The data revealed increasing removal trends and allowed to establish the highest removal values. Based on obtained experimental results, the wastewater treatment efficiency by SD technology was reasonably good and thus, the WW indicators can be improved within relatively short periods of time. Additionally, based on supervised learning algorithms, the study includes treatment modeling for turbidity and color removal, followed by turbidity removal optimization relying on the best learned models. Satisfactory results obtained with the modeling and optimization procedures provide useful predictions for the approached treatment processes. Furthermore, within this study, a Fenton oxidation process was applied to SD technology to minimize the color and solids content. The influence of pH, hydrogen peroxide and ferrous ions concentrations was also investigated in order to establish the highest removal efficiencies. Overall, the SD technology applied in textile effluents treatment proved to be an appropriate and efficient alternative to classical mechanical step applied within the primary treatment step and, when associated with an advanced oxidative process in the secondary step, rendered good improvement, namely of 62.84% and 69.46% for color and respectively, suspended solids removal.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8687
Author(s):  
Eugenia Teodora Iacob Tudose ◽  
Carmen Zaharia

Spinning disc (SD) technology has been successfully applied, for the first time, in real textile wastewater treatment with no other additional processing. The SD efficiency was investigated using real textile effluents to study the color and suspended solids removals at different effluent-supplying flowrates (10–30 L/h) and different disc rotational speeds (100–1500 rpm) with good experimental results; thus, it can minimize the polluting loads within a short time period. Furthermore, within this study, process modeling and its classical optimization were applied to SD technology for wastewater treatment. The experiments were organized according to an active central composite rotatable 23 order design, considering as independent variables the wastewater flowrate, rotational speed, and operating time and, as optimization criteria, the suspended solids removal and discoloration degree. Overall, this novel study proved that the SD technology applied in textile effluent treatment is a suitable alternative to a primary mechanical step.


2018 ◽  
Vol 206 (4) ◽  
pp. 541-557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Archina Buthiyappan ◽  
Raja Shazrin Shah Raja Ehsan Shah ◽  
Anam Asghar ◽  
Abdul Aziz Abdul Raman ◽  
Mohd Ashri Wan Daud ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anam Asghar ◽  
Abdul Aziz Abdul Raman ◽  
Wan Mohd Ashri Wan Daud

AbstractWastewater-based microbial fuel cell is a promising green technology that can potentially be used to treat recalcitrant wastewater such as textile wastewater through


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (22) ◽  
pp. 7030
Author(s):  
Timoth Mkilima ◽  
Kulyash Meiramkulova ◽  
Ubaidulayeva Nurbala ◽  
Amanbek Zandybay ◽  
Mansur Khusainov ◽  
...  

Textile industry production processes generate one of the most highly polluted wastewaters in the world. Unfortunately, the field is also challenged by the availability of relatively cheap and highly effective technologies for wastewater purification. The application of natural zeolite as a depth filter offers an alternative and potential approach for textile wastewater treatment. The performance of a depth filter treatment system can be deeply affected by the column depth and the characteristics of the wastewater to be treated. Regrettably, the information on the potential of these filter materials for the purification of textile wastewater is still scarce. Therefore, this study investigated the potential applicability of natural zeolite in terms of column depth for the treatment of textile wastewater. From the analysis results, it was observed that the filtration efficiencies were relatively low (6.1 to 13.7%) for some parameters such as total dissolved solids, electrical conductivity, chemical oxygen demand, and sodium chloride when the wastewater samples were subjected to the 0.5 m column depth. Relatively high efficiency of 82 and 93.8% was observed from color and total suspended solids, respectively, when the wastewater samples were subjected to the 0.5 m column depth. Generally, the 0.75 m column depth achieved removal efficiencies ranging from 52.3% to 97.5%, whereas the 1 m column depth achieved removal efficiencies ranging from 86.9% to 99.4%. The highest removal efficiency was achieved with a combination of total suspended solids and 1 m column depth (99.4%). In summary, the treatment approach was observed to be highly effective for the removal of total suspended solids, with a 93.8% removal efficiency when the wastewater was subjected to the 0.5 m column depth, 97.5% for 0.75 m column depth, and 99.4% for 1 m column depth. Moreover, up to 218.233 mg of color per g of the filter material was captured. The results derived in this study provide useful information towards the potential applicability of natural zeolite in the textile wastewater treatment field.


2016 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 629-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feriel Bouatay ◽  
Nesrine Eljebsi ◽  
Sonia Dridi-Dhaouadi ◽  
Farouk Mhenni

The Vicia faba membranes are an abundant and a low cost product. In the present research paper, the extracted Vicia faba mucilage was tested as an eco-friendly flocculant for textile wastewater treatment. Its performance as flocculant, in decolorization, chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal and the concentration of total suspended solids was checked. The natural extracted product was characterized using infrared spectroscopy. The total sugars were determined in the extracted product. The effect study, followed by an optimization and modeling analysis, of some experimental parameters on the coagulation–flocculation performance, using Vicia faba mucilage (as a flocculant), combined with aluminum sulfate (as a coagulant), showed that the best conditions for the flocculation process were pH of the effluent about 7, flocculant dose about 6.75 mg/L, flocculation mixing time about 3 min and flocculation mixing speed about 30 rpm, leading to a decolorization equal to 92.32%, COD removal of about 97.52% and total suspended solids of about 15.3 mg/L. A comparison study between the flocculation performance of commercial reagents and the bio-agent showed that the natural product presented a good flocculation performance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 270 ◽  
pp. 118819
Author(s):  
Nur Azizah Johari ◽  
Norhaniza Yusof ◽  
Woei Jye Lau ◽  
Norfadhilatuladha Abdullah ◽  
Wan Norharyati Wan Salleh ◽  
...  

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