Removal of several pesticides in a falling water film DBD reactor with activated carbon textile: Energy efficiency

Bio-recalcitrant micropollutants are often insufficiently removed by modern wastewater treatment plants to meet the future demands worldwide. Therefore, several advanced oxidation techniques, including cold plasma technology, are being investigated as effective complementary water treatment methods....

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Published inWater research (Oxford) Vol. 116; pp. 1 - 12
Main Authors Vanraes, Patrick, Ghodbane, Houria, Davister, Dries, Wardenier, Niels, Nikiforov, Anton, Verheust, Yannick P., Van Hulle, Stijn W.H., Hamdaoui, Oualid, Vandamme, Jeroen, Van Durme, Jim, Surmont, Pieter, Lynen, Frederic, Leys, Christophe
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2017
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Summary:Bio-recalcitrant micropollutants are often insufficiently removed by modern wastewater treatment plants to meet the future demands worldwide. Therefore, several advanced oxidation techniques, including cold plasma technology, are being investigated as effective complementary water treatment methods. In order to permit industrial implementation, energy demand of these techniques needs to be minimized. To this end, we have developed an electrical discharge reactor where water treatment by dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) is combined with adsorption on activated carbon textile and additional ozonation. The reactor consists of a DBD plasma chamber, including the adsorptive textile, and an ozonation chamber, where the DBD generated plasma gas is bubbled. In the present paper, this reactor is further characterized and optimized in terms of its energy efficiency for removal of the five pesticides α-HCH, pentachlorobenzene, alachlor, diuron and isoproturon, with initial concentrations ranging between 22 and 430 μg/L. Energy efficiency of the reactor is found to increase significantly when initial micropollutant concentration is decreased, when duty cycle is decreased and when oxygen is used as feed gas as compared to air and argon. Overall reactor performance is improved as well by making it work in single-pass operation, where water is flowing through the system only once. The results are explained with insights found in literature and practical implications are discussed. For the used operational conditions and settings, α-HCH is the most persistent pesticide in the reactor, with a minimal achieved electrical energy per order of 8 kWh/m3, while a most efficient removal of 3 kWh/m3 or lower was reached for the four other pesticides. [Display omitted] •A novel dielectric barrier discharge reactor is investigated for pollutant removal.•Five persistent pesticides are used in low concentrations around 100 μg/L.•Removal efficiency increases for decreasing duty cycle and pesticide concentration.•Oxygen plasma is more effective than air and argon plasma.•The reactor in single-pass operation performs better than in recirculating mode.
ISSN:0043-1354
1879-2448
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2017.03.004