Bo Sun, Yu Tian, Menglin Feng, Sihan Zhang, Hong Yang, Junmei Qin, Wenlong Bi, Xingxing Qiao, Fenwu Liu, Qingjie Hou
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Flocculation is often used for the preliminary treatment of wastewater. However, pollutants especially some emerging contaminants, cannot be completely removed in this process. Meanwhile, the flocculated sludge may cause secondary pollution to the environment. This study investigates producing functional sludge biochar (FBC) from flocculated sludge obtained in the initial wastewater treatment phase, then introducing functional elements (Fe3+, Cu2+, Zn2+, and N) derived from flocculated sludge to modified waxberry-shaped TiO2 photocatalyst. The next step involved using FBC/TiO2 with functional elements for the deep degradation of swine wastewater. Under simulated sunlight, FBC/TiO2 demonstrated a COD removal efficiency is 51.35 %, which is 2.65 times greater than that of pure TiO2. Furthermore, FBC/TiO2 showed enhanced removal of dissolved organic matter (fulvic-like acids and soluble microbial products) and biotoxic substances from wastewater under both sunlight and visible light, particularly exhibiting significant efficacy in the removal of hard-degradation humic-like acids. In the photocatalytic process, water molecules oxidation by h+ generates •OH, the primary reactive oxygen species responsible for organic matter degradation in wastewater. Applying this process to prepare FBC15/TiO2 can lower sludge treatment costs for wastewater treatment plants while generating a profit of 52.28 $·kg−1. This research offers a win–win solution for treating swine wastewater, promoting sludge reuse, and reducing the cost of TiO2 deployment, thus presenting a new approach for efficient, cost-effective treatment of livestock and poultry wastewater.
期刊介绍:
The Chemical Engineering Journal is an international research journal that invites contributions of original and novel fundamental research. It aims to provide an international platform for presenting original fundamental research, interpretative reviews, and discussions on new developments in chemical engineering. The journal welcomes papers that describe novel theory and its practical application, as well as those that demonstrate the transfer of techniques from other disciplines. It also welcomes reports on carefully conducted experimental work that is soundly interpreted. The main focus of the journal is on original and rigorous research results that have broad significance. The Catalysis section within the Chemical Engineering Journal focuses specifically on Experimental and Theoretical studies in the fields of heterogeneous catalysis, molecular catalysis, and biocatalysis. These studies have industrial impact on various sectors such as chemicals, energy, materials, foods, healthcare, and environmental protection.