News Release

First comprehensive assessment of effectiveness of tertiary treatment processes in removing emerging contaminants

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Higher Education Press

First comprehensive assessment of effectiveness of tertiary treatment processes in removing emerging contaminants

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Credit: Olga S. Arvaniti, Marilena E. Dasenaki, Alexandros G. Asimakopoulos, Niki C. Maragou, Vasilios G. Samaras, Korina Antoniou, Georgia Gatidou, Daniel Mamais, Constantinos Noutsopoulos, Zacharias Frontistis8, Nikolaos S. Thomaidis, Athanasios S. Stasinakis

Emerging contaminants (ECs) including pharmaceuticals (PhCs), endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), benzotriazoles (BTRs), benzothiazoles (BTHs) and perfluorinated compounds (PFCs), pose a potential ecological threat when they are discharged into the aquatic environment. Therefore, there is an imperative need to adopt efficient and low-cost tertiary treatment processes for removing ECs, with no parallel formation of harmful by-products.  

  The ultraviolet (UV) disinfection, powdered activated carbon (PAC) adsorption and membranes are some of the most common physico-chemical tertiary treatment processes applied worldwide to improve the quality of treated wastewater effluent. As we all known, ECs belonging to different chemical classes co-exist in domestic wastewater forming chemical mixtures. Adopting a tertiary treatment method that could significantly remove a large number of ECs, using conditions commonly applied in Sewage Treatment Plant (STP) to remove conventional pollutants, would be the optimal solution, achieving environmental protection goals without excessive increases in costs for the operation of the STPs.

With this background, Dr. Olga S. Arvaniti and Pro. Athanasios S. Stasinakis from University of the Aegean and their team members have worked jointly and investigated the effectiveness of microfiltration (MF), ultrafiltration (UF), nanofiltration (NF), UV radiation, and PAC adsorption to remove selected ECs from secondary clarifier effluents. Their work examined the removal of 38 ECs (PFCs, BTRs, EDCs, BTH and PhCs) at environmentally relevant concentrations, which is the first comprehensive assessment common tertiary wastewater treatment process and relevant operating conditions for a wide range of EC classes. This study entitled “Effectiveness of tertiary treatment processes in removing different classes of emerging contaminants from domestic wastewater” is published online in Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering in 2022.

In this work, 38 different ECs (PhCs, EDCs, BTRs, BTHs and PFCs) were initially identified and quantified in the biologically treated wastewater collected from Athens’ (Greece) STP. Processes already used in existing STPs such as MF, NF, UF, UV radiation, and PAC were assessed for ECs’ removal, under the conditions that represent their actual application for disinfection or advanced wastewater treatment. The results indicated that MF removed only one out of the 38 ECs and hence it was selected as pretreatment step for the other processes. UV radiation in the studied conditions showed low to moderate removal for 5 out of the 38 ECs. NF showed better results than UF due to the smaller pore sizes of the filtration system. However, this enhancement was observed mainly for 8 compounds originating from the classes of PhCs and PFCs, while the removal of EDCs was not statistically significant. Among the various studied technologies, PAC stands out due to its capability to sufficiently remove most ECs. In particular, removal rates higher than 70% were observed for 9 compounds, 22 were partially removed, while 7 demonstrated low removal rates. 

This study investigated comprehensively and systematically common tertiary wastewater treatment process and relevant operating conditions for a wide range of EC classes for the first time. In addition, this work provides a constructive suggestion that future research should focus on scaling-up PAC in actual conditions, combining PAC with other processes, and conduct a complete economic and environmental assessment of the treatment.

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About Higher Education Press

Founded in May 1954, Higher Education Press Limited Company (HEP), affiliated with the Ministry of Education, is one of the earliest institutions committed to educational publishing after the establishment of P. R. China in 1949. After striving for six decades, HEP has developed into a major comprehensive publisher, with products in various forms and at different levels. Both for import and export, HEP has been striving to fill in the gap of domestic and foreign markets and meet the demand of global customers by collaborating with more than 200 partners throughout the world and selling products and services in 32 languages globally. Now, HEP ranks among China's top publishers in terms of copyright export volume and the world's top 50 largest publishing enterprises in terms of comprehensive strength.

The Frontiers Journals series published by HEP includes 28 English academic journals, covering the largest academic fields in China at present. Among the series, 13 have been indexed by SCI, 6 by EI, 2 by MEDLINE, 1 by A&HCI. HEP's academic monographs have won about 300 different kinds of publishing funds and awards both at home and abroad.

About Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering

Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering (FESE) is the leading edge forum for peer-reviewed original submissions in English on all main branches of environmental disciplines. FESE welcomes original research papers, review articles, short communications, and views & comments. All the papers will be published within 6 months since they are submitted. The Editors-in-Chief are Prof. Jiuhui Qu from Tsinghua University, and Prof. John C. Crittenden from Georgia Institute of Technology, USA. The journal has been indexed by almost all the authoritative databases such as SCI, Ei, INSPEC, SCOPUS, CSCD, etc.


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