Improving efficiency for removal of ammoniacal nitrogen from wastewaters using hydrodynamic cavitation

[Display omitted] •Application of fluidic devices without moving parts- orifice and vortex diode in wastewater treatment.•Successful removal of ammoniacal nitrogen using hydrodynamic cavitation.•Significant enhancement in removal by aeration in hydrodynamic cavitation.•Successful removal of ammoniac...

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Published inUltrasonics sonochemistry Vol. 70; p. 105306
Main Authors Patil, Pravin B., Bhandari, Vinay M., Ranade, Vivek V.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.01.2021
Elsevier
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Application of fluidic devices without moving parts- orifice and vortex diode in wastewater treatment.•Successful removal of ammoniacal nitrogen using hydrodynamic cavitation.•Significant enhancement in removal by aeration in hydrodynamic cavitation.•Successful removal of ammoniacal nitrogen from real industrial wastewaters.•Significantly lower cost of removal using vortex diode and aeration. The present study reports significant improvements in the removal of ammoniacal nitrogen from wastewater which is an important problem for many industries such as dyes and pigment, distilleries and fisheries. Pilot plant studies (capacity, 1 m3/h) on synthetic wastewater using 4-amino phenol as model nitrogen containing organic compound and two real industrial effluents of high ammoniacal nitrogen content were carried out using hydrodynamic cavitation. Two reactor geometries were evaluated for increased efficiency in removal-orifice and vortex diode. Effect of initial concentration (100–500 mg/L), effect of pressure drop (0.5–5 bar) and nature of cavitating device (linear and vortex flow for cavitation) were evaluated along with effect of salt content, effect of hydrogen peroxide addition and aeration. Initial concentration was found to have significant impact on the extent of removal: ~ 5 g/m3 removal for initial concentration of 100 mg/L and up to 12 g/m3 removal at high concentration of 500 mg/L. Interestingly, significant improvement of the order of magnitude (up to 8 times) in removal of ammoniacal nitrogen could be obtained by sparging air or oxygen in hydrodynamic cavitation and a very high removal of above 80% could be achieved. The removal of ammoniacal nitrogen by vortex diode was also found to be effective in the industrial wastewaters and results on two different effluent samples of distillery industry indicated up to 75% removal, though with longer time of treatment compared to that of synthetic wastewater. The developed methodology of hydrodynamic cavitation technology with aeration and vortex diode as a cavitating device was found to be highly effective for improving the efficiency of the conventional cavitation methods and hence can be highly useful in industrial wastewater treatment, specifically for the removal of ammoniacal nitrogen.
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Present address: Bernal Institute, University of Limerick, Ireland and Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast, UK.
ISSN:1350-4177
1873-2828
DOI:10.1016/j.ultsonch.2020.105306