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A comparative evaluation of biological activated carbon and activated sludge processes for the treatment of tannery wastewater

TitleA comparative evaluation of biological activated carbon and activated sludge processes for the treatment of tannery wastewater
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsTammaro, Marco, Salluzzo Antonio, Perfetto R., and Lancia A.
JournalJournal of Environmental Chemical Engineering
Volume2
Pagination1445-1455
ISSN22133437
KeywordsActivated carbon, Activated carbon treatment, activated sludge, Activated sludge process, Biological activated carbon, Biological water treatment, Chemicals removal (water treatment), Chromium, Chromium removal, Comparative evaluations, Continuous pilot plants, Industrial additives, Organic matter removal, Pilot plants, Pollution, Pseudo-second order model, Tannery wastewater, Wastewater treatment
Abstract

Depuration methods usually adopted to treat the tanning industry wastewater are based on several technologies, physicochemical or biological, as activated sludge (AS), alone or combined. The AS method faces some difficulties when pollutants toxic are present in the wastewater. The water treatment known as the biological activated carbon (BAC) allows overcoming these limitations by taking advantage of the synergism between activated carbon (AC) and microbacteria. Nevertheless, further investigation about the performance of BAC on real wastewater is much required. For this purpose, an experimental test with BAC in continuous pilot plant with a real tannery wastewater was performed. The same test was performed with AS process and relevant differences from BAC method were observed. The experimental results indicate the good removal of total chromium for both BAC and AS (72-70%). But the main differences are for soluble chromium removal (67% for BAC and 46% for AS) and for COD removal (66% for BAC and 40% for AS). Very good results were also obtained for removal of other pollutants resulting from industrial additives, for BAC (91-100%) and to a lesser extent for AS (28-78%). In every case, the BAC shows faster kinetics removal. Finally, a pseudo-second order model fits the experimental data about soluble chromium. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84905407834&doi=10.1016%2fj.jece.2014.07.004&partnerID=40&md5=07eef979b43f954cd6ad69c93a9ab390
DOI10.1016/j.jece.2014.07.004
Citation KeyTammaro20141445