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Direct and indirect photolysis of seven micropollutants in secondary effluent from a wastewater lagoon

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 04:21 authored by Yufei Wang, Felicity RoddickFelicity Roddick, Linhua FanLinhua Fan
The photodegradation of seven micropollutants commonly found in municipal wastewater, namely caffeine, carbamazepine, diuron, simazine, sulfamethoxazole, triclosan and 2,4-D, was investigated in pure water and secondary effluent to understand the direct and indirect photolysis of these compounds under natural sunlight irradiation. Sulfamethoxazole and triclosan were readily photodegraded with half-lives of 5.8 and 1.8 h, respectively, whilst the others were relatively resistant towards sunlight irradiation. Enhanced degradation was observed in secondary effluent compared with in the pure water matrix for all compounds, except for triclosan. It was confirmed that hydroxyl radicals played an important role in the photodegradation of the micropollutants while singlet oxygen might also played a role. The contribution of hydroxyl radical to the overall degradation of the five compounds that were resistant to direct sunlight accounted for 32% to 70%. The impact of humic acid and nitrate, two known photosensitisers and wastewater components, on the photodegradation of the seven micropollutants in pure water was investigated under simulated solar radiation. The presence of nitrate promoted the photochemical loss of all seven micropollutants, however, humic acid caused promotion or inhibition, depending on the characteristics of the micropollutant. Humic acid enhanced the photolytic degradation of caffeine, sulfamethoxazole and diuron, while it hindered the photodegradation of the other four compounds by absorbing the available irradiation energy and/or reforming the parent compound. Furthermore, it was shown that there was only a small increase (up to 15%) in photodegradation of the compounds at 25 °C compared with that at 10 °C in the simulated system.

History

Journal

Chemosphere

Volume

185

Start page

297

End page

308

Total pages

12

Publisher

Pergamon Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006075044

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-09-21

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