Integrated assessment of sulfate-based AOPs for pharmaceutical active compound removal from wastewater

Other authors

European Commission

Publication date

2020-07-01



Abstract

Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) have been proposed as tertiary treatments for municipal WWTP effluents. UV-activated peroxydisulfate (PDS) and peroxymonosulfate (PMS) are viable technological alternatives for treating secondary WWTP effluent containing PhACs. This article examines the feasibility of applying UV/PDS and UV/PMS technologies at pilot scale, assessing their energy and cost requirements. In addition, life cycle assessment (LCA) impacts associated with the treatment of 1 m³ of wastewater with an effective average pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) removal of 80% has also been evaluated. Photolysis (UV) treatment alone was not capable of degrading PhACs to a sufficient extent in WWTP secondary effluent. The addition of 0.4 mmol of PDS or PMS, applying 416 mJ/cm2 of UV fluence, resulted in average removals of 84% and 85% for UV/PDS and UV/PMS, respectively. The electrical energy (kWh) required to degrade the mix of PhACs by one order of magnitude in 1 m³ of contaminated water was calculated as 0.9 kWh/m³/order and 0.8 kWh/m³/order 4 for UV/PDS and UV/PMS, respectively. However, the overall cost, including operation, materials and maintenance, of applying UV/PDS and UV/PMS, based on an average PhAC removal of 80%, was 0.088 €/m³ and 0.280 €/m³, respectively. From the sustainability assessment, the factors with the greatest environmental footprint for the UV/PDS process were chemical production (PDS: 52.9%, PMS: 85%) and electricity consumption (UV/PDS: 33.4%, UV/PMS: 11.2). Finally, the normalized environmental impact analysis showed that UV/PDS was associated with an environmental footprint three times lower than UV/PMS. The overall assessment revealed that UV/PDS is preferable to UV/PMS to remove PhACs in secondary effluents of municipal WWTPs having a lower economic and environmental impact


This work has been supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie - TreatRec ITN-EID project (grant number 642904) as well as from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, the State Agency of Investigation and EU FEDER program funding the following projects: CLEaN-TOUR (CTM 2017- 85385-C2-1-R) and INVEST (RTI 2018-097471-B-C21). WG, IRR and JC are also members of the Consolidated Research Group ICRA TECH - 2017 SGR 1318 funded by the Economy and Knowledge Department of the Catalan Government


6

Document Type

Article


Accepted version


peer-reviewed

Language

English

Publisher

Elsevier

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/