Qiuyun Lu , Deepak Panchal , Lingling Yang , Ziya Saedi , Mohamed Gamal El-Din , Xuehua Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Elimination of stubborn organic micropollutants from water is crucial for bioaccumulation prevention and ecosystem protection. Cold plasma activation technology is a clean, sustainable, and highly effective approach to the degradation of micropollutants and pathogens in contaminated water. In this study, we focus on understanding the processes of simultaneous degradation of multiple micropollutants (8 types at maximum) in flowing water by the recently developed microbubble-enhanced cold plasma activation (MB-CPA) technology. The degradation of micropollutants with the treatment time was analyzed by using ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography coupled to a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (UHPLC-QQQ-MS). We found that the degradation efficiencies of all compounds increase rapidly under strong activation conditions that can lead to above 98% removal of a model compound. After long treatment duration or at a fast flow rate, the removal efficiency was sufficiently high for all compounds that were either easy or hard to degrade. The large variation in degradation efficiencies was present under mild activation conditions. The electron spinning resonance measurements reveal a greater abundance of hydroxyl radicals in treated synthetic river water than pure water, highlighting the effects of water matrix on the degradation efficiency. The understanding from this work may help to design the activation process and minimize the energy consumption for the simultaneous elimination of pollutants in diverse and complex water bodies by cold plasma technology.
期刊介绍:
Water Research, along with its open access companion journal Water Research X, serves as a platform for publishing original research papers covering various aspects of the science and technology related to the anthropogenic water cycle, water quality, and its management worldwide. The audience targeted by the journal comprises biologists, chemical engineers, chemists, civil engineers, environmental engineers, limnologists, and microbiologists. The scope of the journal include:
•Treatment processes for water and wastewaters (municipal, agricultural, industrial, and on-site treatment), including resource recovery and residuals management;
•Urban hydrology including sewer systems, stormwater management, and green infrastructure;
•Drinking water treatment and distribution;
•Potable and non-potable water reuse;
•Sanitation, public health, and risk assessment;
•Anaerobic digestion, solid and hazardous waste management, including source characterization and the effects and control of leachates and gaseous emissions;
•Contaminants (chemical, microbial, anthropogenic particles such as nanoparticles or microplastics) and related water quality sensing, monitoring, fate, and assessment;
•Anthropogenic impacts on inland, tidal, coastal and urban waters, focusing on surface and ground waters, and point and non-point sources of pollution;
•Environmental restoration, linked to surface water, groundwater and groundwater remediation;
•Analysis of the interfaces between sediments and water, and between water and atmosphere, focusing specifically on anthropogenic impacts;
•Mathematical modelling, systems analysis, machine learning, and beneficial use of big data related to the anthropogenic water cycle;
•Socio-economic, policy, and regulations studies.