Tags

Type your tag names separated by a space and hit enter

Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent with peracetic acid and ultraviolet combined treatment: a continuous-flow pilot plant study.
Water Environ Res. 2012 Mar; 84(3):247-53.WE

Abstract

Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent using a continuous-flow combined peracetic acid/ultraviolet (PAA/UV) radiation system was evaluated. The purpose was to determine whether the maximum microbial content, established under Mexican standards for treated wastewaters meant for reuse--less than 240 most probable number fecal coliforms (FC)/100 mL--could be feasibly accomplished using either disinfectant individually, or the combined PAA/UV system. This meant achieving reduction of up to 5 logs, considering initial concentrations of 6.4 x 10(+6) to 5.8 x 10(+7) colony forming units/100 mL. During the tests performed under these experiments, total coliforms (TC) were counted because FC, at the most, will be equal to TC. Peracetic acid disinfection achieved less than 1.5 logs TC reduction when the C(t) x t product was less than 2.26 mg x minimum (min)/L; 3.8 logs for C(t) x t 4.40 mg x min/L; and 5.9 logs for C(t) x t 24.2 mg x min/L. In continuous-flow UV irradiation tests, at a low-operating flow (21 L/min; conditions which produced an average UV fluence of 13.0 mJ/cm2), the highest TC reduction was close to 2.5 logs. The only condition that produced a disinfection efficiency of approximately 5 logs, when both disinfection agents were used together, was the combined process dosing 30 mg PAA/L at a pilot plant flow of 21 L/min and contact time of 10 minutes to attain an average C(t) x t product of 24.2 mg x min/L and an average UV fluence of 13 mJ/cm2. There was no conclusive evidence of a synergistic effect when both disinfectants were employed in combination as compared to the individual effects achieved when used separately, but this does not take into account the nonlinearity (tailing-off) of the dose-response curve.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Azcapotzalco, Mexico City, District Federal, Mexico.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22755492

Citation

González, Abelardo, et al. "Disinfection of an Advanced Primary Effluent With Peracetic Acid and Ultraviolet Combined Treatment: a Continuous-flow Pilot Plant Study." Water Environment Research : a Research Publication of the Water Environment Federation, vol. 84, no. 3, 2012, pp. 247-53.
González A, Gehr R, Vaca M, et al. Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent with peracetic acid and ultraviolet combined treatment: a continuous-flow pilot plant study. Water Environ Res. 2012;84(3):247-53.
González, A., Gehr, R., Vaca, M., & López, R. (2012). Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent with peracetic acid and ultraviolet combined treatment: a continuous-flow pilot plant study. Water Environment Research : a Research Publication of the Water Environment Federation, 84(3), 247-53.
González A, et al. Disinfection of an Advanced Primary Effluent With Peracetic Acid and Ultraviolet Combined Treatment: a Continuous-flow Pilot Plant Study. Water Environ Res. 2012;84(3):247-53. PubMed PMID: 22755492.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent with peracetic acid and ultraviolet combined treatment: a continuous-flow pilot plant study. AU - González,Abelardo, AU - Gehr,Ronald, AU - Vaca,Mabel, AU - López,Raymundo, PY - 2012/7/5/entrez PY - 2012/7/5/pubmed PY - 2012/7/27/medline SP - 247 EP - 53 JF - Water environment research : a research publication of the Water Environment Federation JO - Water Environ Res VL - 84 IS - 3 N2 - Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent using a continuous-flow combined peracetic acid/ultraviolet (PAA/UV) radiation system was evaluated. The purpose was to determine whether the maximum microbial content, established under Mexican standards for treated wastewaters meant for reuse--less than 240 most probable number fecal coliforms (FC)/100 mL--could be feasibly accomplished using either disinfectant individually, or the combined PAA/UV system. This meant achieving reduction of up to 5 logs, considering initial concentrations of 6.4 x 10(+6) to 5.8 x 10(+7) colony forming units/100 mL. During the tests performed under these experiments, total coliforms (TC) were counted because FC, at the most, will be equal to TC. Peracetic acid disinfection achieved less than 1.5 logs TC reduction when the C(t) x t product was less than 2.26 mg x minimum (min)/L; 3.8 logs for C(t) x t 4.40 mg x min/L; and 5.9 logs for C(t) x t 24.2 mg x min/L. In continuous-flow UV irradiation tests, at a low-operating flow (21 L/min; conditions which produced an average UV fluence of 13.0 mJ/cm2), the highest TC reduction was close to 2.5 logs. The only condition that produced a disinfection efficiency of approximately 5 logs, when both disinfection agents were used together, was the combined process dosing 30 mg PAA/L at a pilot plant flow of 21 L/min and contact time of 10 minutes to attain an average C(t) x t product of 24.2 mg x min/L and an average UV fluence of 13 mJ/cm2. There was no conclusive evidence of a synergistic effect when both disinfectants were employed in combination as compared to the individual effects achieved when used separately, but this does not take into account the nonlinearity (tailing-off) of the dose-response curve. SN - 1061-4303 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22755492/Disinfection_of_an_advanced_primary_effluent_with_peracetic_acid_and_ultraviolet_combined_treatment:_a_continuous_flow_pilot_plant_study_ L2 - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/resolve/openurl?genre=article&sid=nlm:pubmed&issn=1061-4303&date=2012&volume=84&issue=3&spage=247 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -