UV/periodate and UV/chlorine for dye degradation and real wastewater treatment: a comparative study

The discharge of synthetic dyes into the environment poses a significant threat to both human health and the ecosystem, necessitating the treatment of contaminated water. To generate free radicals for the elimination of Direct Blue 71 (DB71) dye from aqueous solutions, periodate (PI) and chlorine (C...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soheila Madihi-Bidgoli, Fatemeh Asghari, Sahel Cheraghi, Hadis Hamidinia, Elnaz Shagerdi, Sahar Asadnezhad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IWA Publishing 2023-10-01
Series:Water Practice and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://wpt.iwaponline.com/content/18/10/2453
Description
Summary:The discharge of synthetic dyes into the environment poses a significant threat to both human health and the ecosystem, necessitating the treatment of contaminated water. To generate free radicals for the elimination of Direct Blue 71 (DB71) dye from aqueous solutions, periodate (PI) and chlorine (Cl2) have been employed. In this study, separate activation of PI and Cl2 was achieved using ultraviolet (UV) light. The impact of various operational parameters was investigated, resulting in the complete degradation of the dye within 12 min. The presence of ferrous and copper ions had a minor enhancing effect on the degradation rate in both systems. Scavenging experiments confirmed that HO• and IO3• were the primary agents responsible for DB71 degradation in the UV/PI system, while reactive chlorine radicals played a dominant role in the UV/Cl2 process. In terms of mineralization, application for real wastewater and energy efficiency, the UV/PI system exhibited slightly superior performance compared to the UV/Cl2 system. HIGHLIGHTS UV/chlorine and UV/periodate were compared together for the first time.; A complete degradation of DB71 was achieved in at short time for both processes.; The carboxylic evolution of DB71 degradation was monitored.; A practical study was conducted on real wastewater.;
ISSN:1751-231X