Stormwater herbicides removal with a solar-driven advanced oxidation process: A feasibility investigation
环境科学
环境工程
水处理
化学
流出物
污水处理
环境化学
作者
Zhaozhi Zheng,Kefeng Zhang,Cui Ying Toe,Rose Amal,Xiwang Zhang,David Thomas McCarthy,Ana Deletic
出处
期刊:Water Research [Elsevier] 日期:2021-02-15卷期号:190: 116783-被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2020.116783
摘要
The solar driven advanced oxidation process (AOP) has the potential to be developed as a passive stormwater post-treatment method. Despite its widespread studies in wastewater treatment, the applicability of the process for micropollutant removal in stormwater (which has very different chemical properties from wastewater) is still unknown. This paper investigated the feasibility of three different AOP processes for the degradation of two herbicides (diuron and atrazine) in pre-treated stormwater: (i) photoelectrochemical oxidation (PECO), (ii) electrochemical oxidation (ECO), and (iii) photocatalytic oxidation (PCO). The durability of different anode materials, the effects of catalyst loading, and solar photo- and thermal impacts under different applied voltages were studied. Boron-doped diamond (BDD) was found to be the most durable anode material compared to carbon fiber and titanium foil for long-term operation. Due to the very low electroconductivity of stormwater, a high voltage was required, causing severe oxidation of the carbon fiber material. PECO achieved the best degradation results compared to ECO and PCO, with over 90% degradation of both herbicides in 2 h under 5 V, following a first-order decay process (with a half-life value of 0.40 h for diuron and 0.58 h for atrazine). The voltage increase had a positive impact on the oxidation processes, with 5 V found to be the optimal applied voltage, while catalyst loading had a negligible effect. Interestingly, the solar thermal effect plays a dominant role in enhancing the performance of the PECO process, which indicates the potential of integrating a photovoltaic chamber with a PECO system to harness both the light and heat of solar energy for stormwater treatment.