Title of article
Removal of diethyl phthalate from water solution by adsorption, photo-oxidation, ozonation and advanced oxidation process (UV/H2O2, O3/H2O2 and O3/activated carbon) Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Nahum A. Medellin-Castillo، نويسنده , , Ra?l Ocampo-Pérez، نويسنده , , Roberto Leyva-Ramos، نويسنده , , Manuel Sanchez-Polo، نويسنده , , José Rivera-Utrilla، نويسنده , , José D. Méndez-D?az، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
10
From page
26
To page
35
Abstract
The objective of this work was to compare the effectiveness of conventional technologies (adsorption on activated carbon, AC, and ozonation) and technologies based on advanced oxidation processes, AOPs, (UV/H2O2, O3/AC, O3/H2O2) to remove phthalates from aqueous solution (ultrapure water, surface water and wastewater). Diethyl phthalate (DEP) was chosen as a model pollutant because of its high water solubility (1080 mg/L at 293 K) and toxicity. The activated carbons showed a high adsorption capacity to adsorb DEP in aqueous solution (up to 858 mg/g), besides the adsorption mechanism of DEP on activated carbon is governed by dispersive interactions between π electrons of its aromatic ring with π electrons of the carbon graphene planes. The photodegration process showed that the pH solution does not significantly affect the degradation kinetics of DEP and the first-order kinetic model satisfactorily fitted the experimental data. It was observed that the rate of decomposition of DEP with the O3/H2O2 and O3/AC systems is faster than that with only O3. The technologies based on AOPs (UV/H2O2, O3/H2O2, O3/AC) significantly improve the degradation of DEP compared to conventional technologies (O3, UV). AC adsorption, UV/H2O2, O3/H2O2, and O3/AC showed a high yield to remove DEP; however, the disadvantage of AC adsorption is its much longer time to reach maximum removal. The best system to treat water (ultrapure and natural) polluted with DEP is the O3/AC one since it achieved the highest DEP degradation and TOC removal, as well as the lower water toxicity.
Keywords
Activated carbon , Diethyl phthalate , Adsorption , Ozonation , Photodegradation
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
988586
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