Microbiological and Physicochemical Characterization of Hospital Effluents before and after Treatment with Two Types of Sawdust

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Abstract

Physicochemical and microbiological analyses of liquid hospital effluents have demonstrated that they are loaded with organic and inorganic pollutants then discharged into the sewerage networks without treatment. The aim of this study is to suggest an effective solution for their treatment. Column filtration is an adequate method to reduce the pollutant load which makes it possible to have a rate of abatement of 97% and 79% by filtering the pollutant material using sawdust of catia and red sawdust, respectively, with a filter bed height equal to 13 cm. Physicochemical parameters such as chemical oxygen demand, biological oxygen demand, nitrate, ammonia, phosphorus, electrical conductivity and the bacteriological parameters like fecal coliforms, Streptococci, and Staphylococci have been measured. The analysis of heavy metals displays compliance with the World Health Organization standards. The red sawdust and catia sawdust have been characterized by scanning electron microscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy.

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Elmountassir, R., Bennani, B., Miyah, Y., Fegousse, A., El Mouhri, G., Oumokhtar, B., … Lahrichi, A. (2019). Microbiological and Physicochemical Characterization of Hospital Effluents before and after Treatment with Two Types of Sawdust. Journal of Chemistry, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/3275101

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