Abstract
In the present study, a combined approach of ozone-based advanced oxidation and adsorption by activated char was employed for the treatment of a pharmaceutical industrial effluent. Ozone is a selective oxidant, but the addition of H2O2 generated in situ hydroxyl radicals, which is a non-selective stronger oxidant than ozone. The effluent obtained from the pharmaceutical industry mainly contained anti-cancer drugs, anti-psychotic drugs, and some pain killers. The peroxone process had 75−88.5% chemical oxygen demand (COD) reduction efficiency at pH 5−11 in 3 h. Adsorption by activated char further reduced the COD to 85.4−92.7% for pH 5−11 in 2.5 h. All other water quality parameters were significantly decreased (>73% removal) during ozonation. The primary operational parameters (system pH and H2O2 concentration) were also varied, and their effects were analyzed. The pseudo-first-order rate constants for ozonation were calculated, and they were found to be in the range of 1.42 × 10−4 to 3.35 × 10−4 s−1 for pH 5−11. The kinetic parameters for adsorption were calculated for the pseudo-first-order, pseudo-second-order, and Elovich models. The fit of the pseudo-first-order kinetic model to the experimental data was the best.
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CITATION STYLE
Patel, S., Majumder, S. K., Mondal, S., Das, P., & Ghosh, P. (2020). Treatment of a pharmaceutical industrial effluent by a hybrid process of advanced oxidation and adsorption. ACS Omega, 5(50), 32305–32317. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c04139
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