Fenton's treatment of actual agriculture runoff water containing herbicides.

Water Sci Technol

Research scholar, Department of Civil Engineering, National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal, P.O. Srinivasnagar, Mangalore, DK 575025, India E-mail:

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The research focused on the effectiveness of the Fenton's treatment process in removing herbicides (2,4-D, ametryn, and dicamba) from sugarcane field runoff water.
  • The study used the Taguchi method to analyze how four factors—HO/COD ratio, HO/Fe ratio, pH, and reaction time—affected the removal efficiencies of the herbicides and chemical oxygen demand (COD).
  • Optimal conditions for maximum herbicide removal were determined, showing 100% efficiency for ametryn, nearly 95% for dicamba, and over 88% for 2,4-D, with the HO/COD ratio being the most significant factor influencing the results.

Article Abstract

This research was to study the efficiency of the Fenton's treatment process for the removal of three herbicides, namely 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid (2,4-D), ametryn and dicamba from the sugarcane field runoff water. The treatment process was designed with the Taguchi approach by varying the four factors such as HO/COD (1-3.5), HO/Fe (5-50), pH (2-5) and reaction time (30-240 min) as independent variables. Influence of these parameters on chemical oxygen demand (COD), ametryn, dicamba and 2,4-D removal efficiencies (dependent variables) were investigated by performing signal to noise ratio and other statistical analysis. The optimum conditions were found to be HO/COD: 2.125, HO/Fe: 27.5, pH: 3.5 and reaction time of 135 min for removal efficiencies of 100% for ametryn, 95.42% for dicamba, 88.2% for 2,4-D and with 75% of overall COD removal efficiencies. However, the percentage contribution of HO/COD ratio was observed to be significant among all four independent variables and were 44.16%, 67.57%, 51.85% and 50.66% for %COD, ametryn, dicamba and 2,4-D removal efficiencies, respectively. The maximum removal of herbicides was observed with the HO dosage of 5.44 mM and Fe dosage of 0.12 mM at pH 3.5.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2016.538DOI Listing

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