Methodology for selection of optical parameters as wastewater effluent organic matter surrogates.

Water Res

Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, Environmental Engineering Program, University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado, 80309, United States. Electronic address:

Published: March 2020

Absorbance- and fluorescence-based optical parameters are commonly used as surrogates in engineered systems, but there is no systematic approach for selecting robust parameters. This study develops a methodology that is applied to a case study of differentiating wastewater effluent organic matter from naturally-derived organic matter. The methodology defines criteria to identify optical parameters that could detect statistically significant compositional differences in organic matter, independent of organic matter concentration, and measure fluorescence-based parameters with low susceptibility to inner filter effects. The criteria were applied to 26 parameters that were measured for 11 pairs of source water and conventionally-treated wastewater samples collected from sites with varied spatial and temporal conditions. Only two parameters, apparent fluorescence quantum yield measured at excitation 370 nm and fluorescence peak ratio A:T, met the criteria across all sites. These results demonstrate and encourage an objective and robust process for selecting optical surrogates for organic matter characterization.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2019.115321DOI Listing

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