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Comparison of carbamazepine degradation by UV-activated percarbonate and peracetic acid processes: Performance, coexisting matrices, and transformation pathway

Journal of Water Process Engineering [2024]
Suiqin Yang, Liang He, Shiquan Sun, Fei Yang, Changxuan Wu, Diqi Xiao, Jinting Wang, Yang Gao, Wei Zhang, Lean Zhou, Julong Sun, Zhengqian Liu, Yuhong Cui
ABSTRACT

The emergence of novel wastewater treatment technologies has intensified the need to systematically compare and evaluate their performance. Based on an environmentally relevant experimental design, this study represents the systematic comparison of two advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), sodium percarbonate (SPC)-based and peracetic acid (PAA)-based AOPs, for the degradation of organic pollutants in wastewater, as they have been proposed as potential alternatives to H 2 O 2 -based AOPs. The efficacy of UV-activated SPC (UV/SPC) and PAA (UV/PAA) processes was tested in ultrapure water and three actual water samples, using carbamazepine (CBZ) as a representative organic pollutant. In ultrapure water, the degradation rate of CBZ in the UV/SPC process is 1.4 times higher than in the UV/PAA process. UV/SPC is more effective in the presence of Cl − (5–25 mM) and fulvic acid (2–10 mg/L) than UV/PAA, while UV/PAA exhibits more excellent resistance to HCO 3 − (5–25 mM). In actual water samples, the CBZ degradation rates are close in these two processes, with UV/PAA slightly faster. Product analyses show similar transformation pathways for CBZ in two processes, probably because they both feature HO • as the dominant active species (contributing > 98 %). This study provides fundamental data for a comprehensive understanding of these two AOPs, which will be beneficial in guiding their further development.

MATERIALS

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