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Cost analysis for the degradation of highly concentrated textile dye wastewater with chemical oxidation H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>/UV and biological treatment
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Citations
12
References
2006
Year
Advanced Oxidation ProcessEngineeringBiological TreatmentWastewater TreatmentEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringAdvanced Oxidation ProcessesBioremediationWater TreatmentDyeingH 2O 2Textile ProcessingTextile Dye WastewaterWastewater ManagementIndustrial WastewaterPhotodegradationWaste ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringPretreatmentEnvironmental RemediationTextile ChemistryCost AnalysisDoc Removal
Abstract The efficiency and cost‐effectiveness of H 2 O 2 /UV for the complete decolorization and mineralization of wastewater containing high concentrations of the textile dye Reactive Black 5 was examined. Oxidation until decolorization removed 200–300 mg g −1 of the dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The specific energy consumption was dependent on the initial dye concentration: the higher concentration required a lower specific energy input on a weight basis (160 W h g −1 RB5 for 2.1 g L −1 versus 354 W h g −1 RB5 for 0.5 g L −1 ). Biodegradable compounds were formed, so that DOC removal could be increased by 30% in a following biological stage. However, in order to attain 800 mg g −1 overall mineralization, 500 mg g −1 of the DOC had to be oxidized in the H 2 O 2 /UV stage. A cost analysis showed that although the capital costs are much less for a H 2 O 2 /UV stage compared to ozonation, the operating costs are almost double those of ozonation. Thus, while H 2 O 2 /UV can compete with ozonation when the treatment goal only requires decolorization, ozonation is more cost‐effective in this case when mineralization is desired. Copyright © 2006 Society of Chemical Industry
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