Removal of pharmaceutical compounds from urban wastewater by an advanced bio-oxidation process based on fungi Trametes versicolor immobilized in a continuous RBC system.

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int

Department of Chemical and Energy Tech., Chemical and Environmental Tech., Mechanical Tech., and Analytical Chemistry, ESCET, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, 28933, Móstoles, Madrid, Spain.

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Conventional wastewater treatment plants struggle to fully eliminate emerging contaminants like pharmaceutical compounds, which may harm aquatic ecosystems.
  • An advanced bio-oxidation process (ABOP) utilizing white-rot fungi was tested and showed high efficiency in degrading 12 pharmaceutical contaminants, with five compounds eliminated by 80-95% and six by 50-70%.
  • The process not only effectively reduced organic and nutrient loads in the wastewater but also generated methane from fungal sludge, indicating its potential for sustainable wastewater treatment and energy recovery.

Article Abstract

Conventional wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are not able to remove completely some emerging contaminants, such as residual pharmaceutical compounds (PCs) with potential ecotoxicity to water bodies. An advanced bio-oxidation process (ABOP) using white-rot fungi (WRF) has been proposed as alternative biological treatment for degradation of non-biodegradable compounds. A synthetic and real wastewater spiked with 12 PCs at 50 μg L was treated by means of ABOP based on WRF in a rotating biological contactor (RBC) at 1 day of hydraulic retention time (HRT). The ABOP achieved a remarkable biological performance in terms of TOC removal and reduction of N-NH and P-PO nutrients. Likewise, 5 of the 12 PCs were eliminated with removal efficiencies ranging from 80 to 95%, whereas 6 of 12 PCs were eliminated with removal values ranging from 50 to 70%. The anaerobic digestion of the fungal sludge generated upon the treatment was also evaluated, obtaining a methane yield of 250 mL CH g . These results evidenced that the proposed ABOP is a promising alternative for the sustainable wastewater treatment of urban effluents, combining advanced oxidation with biological operation for the removal of emerging PCs and energy recovery.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-017-1053-4DOI Listing

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