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Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent using peracetic acid or ultraviolet radiation for its reuse in public services.
J Water Health. 2015 Mar; 13(1):118-24.JW

Abstract

The disinfection of a continuous flow of an effluent from an advanced primary treatment (coagulation-flocculation-sedimentation) with or without posterior filtration, using either peracetic acid (PAA) or ultraviolet (UV) radiation was studied. We aimed to obtain bacteriological quality to comply with the microbiological standard established in the Mexican regulations for treated wastewater reuse (NOM-003-SEMARNAT-1997), i.e., less than 240 MPN (most probable number) FC/100 mL. The concentrations of PAA were 10, 15, and 20 mg/L, with contact times of 10, and 15 min. Fecal coliforms (FC) inactivation ranged from 0.93 up to 6.4 log units, and in all cases it reached the limits set by the mentioned regulation. Water quality influenced the PAA disinfection effectiveness. An efficiency of 91% was achieved for the unfiltered effluent, as compared to 99% when wastewater was filtered. UV radiation was applied to wastewater flows of 21, 30 and 39 L/min, with dosages from 1 to 6 mJ/cm². This treatment did not achieve the bacteriological quality required for treated wastewater reuse, since the best inactivation of FC was 1.62 log units, for a flow of 21 L/min of filtered wastewater and a UV dosage of 5.6 mJ/cm².

Authors+Show Affiliations

Metropolitan Autonomous University- Azcapotzalco, 180 San Pablo Ave, Mexico, D.F. 02200.Metropolitan Autonomous University- Azcapotzalco, 180 San Pablo Ave, Mexico, D.F. 02200.Metropolitan Autonomous University- Azcapotzalco, 180 San Pablo Ave, Mexico, D.F. 02200.Metropolitan Autonomous University- Azcapotzalco, 180 San Pablo Ave, Mexico, D.F. 02200.Metropolitan Autonomous University- Azcapotzalco, 180 San Pablo Ave, Mexico, D.F. 02200.National Autonomous University of Mexico, Institute of Engineering, A. Postal 70-472, Coyoacán Zip 04510, Mexico, D.F. E-mail: nrov@pumas.iingen.unam.mx.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

25719471

Citation

Julio, Flores R., et al. "Disinfection of an Advanced Primary Effluent Using Peracetic Acid or Ultraviolet Radiation for Its Reuse in Public Services." Journal of Water and Health, vol. 13, no. 1, 2015, pp. 118-24.
Julio FR, Hilario TP, Mabel VM, et al. Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent using peracetic acid or ultraviolet radiation for its reuse in public services. J Water Health. 2015;13(1):118-24.
Julio, F. R., Hilario, T. P., Mabel, V. M., Raymundo, L. C., Arturo, L. R., & Ma Neftalí, R. V. (2015). Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent using peracetic acid or ultraviolet radiation for its reuse in public services. Journal of Water and Health, 13(1), 118-24. https://doi.org/10.2166/wh.2014.028
Julio FR, et al. Disinfection of an Advanced Primary Effluent Using Peracetic Acid or Ultraviolet Radiation for Its Reuse in Public Services. J Water Health. 2015;13(1):118-24. PubMed PMID: 25719471.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Disinfection of an advanced primary effluent using peracetic acid or ultraviolet radiation for its reuse in public services. AU - Julio,Flores R, AU - Hilario,Terres-Peña, AU - Mabel,Vaca M, AU - Raymundo,López C, AU - Arturo,Lizardi-Ramos, AU - Ma Neftalí,Rojas-Valencia, PY - 2015/2/27/entrez PY - 2015/2/27/pubmed PY - 2015/7/1/medline SP - 118 EP - 24 JF - Journal of water and health JO - J Water Health VL - 13 IS - 1 N2 - The disinfection of a continuous flow of an effluent from an advanced primary treatment (coagulation-flocculation-sedimentation) with or without posterior filtration, using either peracetic acid (PAA) or ultraviolet (UV) radiation was studied. We aimed to obtain bacteriological quality to comply with the microbiological standard established in the Mexican regulations for treated wastewater reuse (NOM-003-SEMARNAT-1997), i.e., less than 240 MPN (most probable number) FC/100 mL. The concentrations of PAA were 10, 15, and 20 mg/L, with contact times of 10, and 15 min. Fecal coliforms (FC) inactivation ranged from 0.93 up to 6.4 log units, and in all cases it reached the limits set by the mentioned regulation. Water quality influenced the PAA disinfection effectiveness. An efficiency of 91% was achieved for the unfiltered effluent, as compared to 99% when wastewater was filtered. UV radiation was applied to wastewater flows of 21, 30 and 39 L/min, with dosages from 1 to 6 mJ/cm². This treatment did not achieve the bacteriological quality required for treated wastewater reuse, since the best inactivation of FC was 1.62 log units, for a flow of 21 L/min of filtered wastewater and a UV dosage of 5.6 mJ/cm². SN - 1477-8920 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/25719471/Disinfection_of_an_advanced_primary_effluent_using_peracetic_acid_or_ultraviolet_radiation_for_its_reuse_in_public_services_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -