JOURNAL ARTICLE

Excess sludge biochar facilitates persulfate activation for highly efficient tetracycline removal

Bowen LvWeiliang ZhangYu LiuDezhi XuXiulei Fan

Year: 2022 Journal:   Water Science & Technology Vol: 86 (9)Pages: 2059-2070   Publisher: Pergamon Press

Abstract

Abstract This study proposed a novel advanced oxidation system to treat metal and antibiotic pollution in water simultaneously. Meanwhile, the enhancement effect of absorbed metal pollution on the activation of persulfate in the system was also investigated. As the most widely used and polluting material, tetracycline (TC) and metal Fe were used as the pollutant models. In this study, a carbonaceous material (BC) was prepared from excess sludge and then combined with the persulfate system (Fe/BC/PS). It was found that the best biochar was obtained when the pyrolysis temperature reached 500 °C (BC500), with the specific surface area of 39.712 m2/g. Combining it with 300 mg/L PS, the removal rate of 120 mg/L TC reached 70.6%. Moreover, the sludge biochar itself possessed numerous reaction sites and good defective structure, which provided a perfect reaction site for the variable metals absorbed by BC. They accelerated electron conduction greatly, which led to the activation of PS very active and generating far more active radicals than normal. In addition, it also proposed the rational pathway and potential mechanism of TC degradation based on the degradation intermediates. This study has a high reference value for resource utilization of sewage sludge and antibiotics removal from water.

Keywords:
Biochar Persulfate Tetracycline Environmental chemistry Chemistry Environmental science Pulp and paper industry Pyrolysis Biochemistry Organic chemistry Catalysis

Metrics

10
Cited By
1.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
43
Refs
0.69
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced oxidation water treatment
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
Arsenic contamination and mitigation
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Chemistry
Fluoride Effects and Removal
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
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