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Are pharmaceuticals removal and membrane fouling in electromembrane bioreactor affected by current density? | LitMetric

Are pharmaceuticals removal and membrane fouling in electromembrane bioreactor affected by current density?

Sci Total Environ

Sanitary and Environmental Engineering Division (SEED), Department of Civil Engineering, University of Salerno, Fisciano 84084, SA, Italy. Electronic address:

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) like amoxicillin, diclofenac, and carbamazepine were effectively removed from simulated municipal wastewater using electro membrane bioreactor (eMBR) technology.
  • The study found that increasing current density led to enhanced removal efficiencies of these pharmaceuticals while achieving nearly 100% removal of conventional pollutants such as COD and DOC.
  • Additionally, eMBR demonstrated a reduced membrane fouling rate compared to conventional MBR, attributed to charge neutralization and size exclusion mechanisms during the treatment process.

Article Abstract

Pharmaceutical active compounds (PhACs) have been detected at significant concentrations in various natural and artificial aquatic environments. In this study, electro membrane bioreactor (eMBR) technology was used to treat simulated municipal wastewater containing widely-used pharmaceuticals namely amoxicillin (AMX), diclofenac (DCF) and carbamazepine (CBZ). The effects of varying current density on the removal of PhACs (AMX, DCF and CBZ) and conventional pollutants (chemical oxygen demand (COD), dissolved organic carbon (DOC), humic substances, ammonia nitrogen (NH-N), nitrate nitrogen (NO-N) and orthophosphate (PO-P) species) were examined. High COD and DOC removal efficiencies (~100%) were obtained in all the experimental runs regardless of applied current density. In contrast, enhanced removal efficiencies for AMX, DCF and CBZ were achieved at high current densities. Membrane fouling rate in eMBR with respect to conventional MBR was reduced by 24, 44 and 45% at current densities of 0.3, 0.5 and 1.15 mA/cm, respectively. The mechanism for pharmaceutical removal in this study proceeded by: (1) charge neutralization between negatively-charged pharmaceutical compounds and positive electro-generated aluminium coagulants to form larger particles and (2) size exclusion by membrane filtration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.07.149DOI Listing

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