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Remediation and Control Technologies
Trace Organic Pollutant Removal by VUV/UV/chlorine Process: Feasibility Investigation for Drinking Water Treatment on a Minifluidic VUV/UV Photoreaction System and a Pilot Photoreactor Mengkai Li, Mengyu Hao, Laxiang Yang, Hong Yao, James R. Bolton, Ernest R. Blatchley, and Zhimin Qiang Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b00611 • Publication Date (Web): 24 May 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 25, 2018
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Trace Organic Pollutant Removal by VUV/UV/chlorine Process:
3
Feasibility Investigation for Drinking Water Treatment on a Mini-fluidic
4
VUV/UV Photoreaction System and a Pilot Photoreactor
5 6
Mengkai Li,†,‡ Mengyu Hao,†,§ Laxiang Yang,† Hong Yao,∗,§ James R. Bolton,ǁ
7
Ernest R. Blatchley, III,‡ and Zhimin Qiang∗,†
8 9
†
Key Laboratory of Drinking Water Science and Technology, Research Center for
10
Eco-Environmental Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese
11
Academy of Sciences, 18 Shuang-qing Road, Beijing 100085, China
12
‡
13
United States.
14
§
15
University, Beijing 100044, China.
16
ǁ
17
Edmonton, AB T6G 1H9, Canada.
Lyles School of Civil Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907,
Department of Municipal and Environmental Engineering, Beijing Jiaotong
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Alberta,
18 19
∗
20
Phone: +86 10 62849632; e-mail:
[email protected] (Z. Qiang)
21
Phone: +86 10 51682157; e-mail:
[email protected] (H. Yao)
Corresponding authors.
22 23
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The
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vacuum-ultraviolet/ultraviolet/chlorine
(VUV/UV/chlorine)
24
ABSTRACT:
25
process, with a VUV/UV mercury lamp used as the light source, was found to be a
26
highly efficient advanced oxidation process (AOP) in a previous study. Hence, its
27
application feasibility for trace organic pollutant removal from drinking water
28
becomes attractive. In this work, a bench-scale mini-fluidic VUV/UV photoreaction
29
system was used to determine the degradation kinetics of sulfamethazine (SMN), a
30
model sulfonamide antibiotic frequently detected with trace levels in aquatic
31
environments. Results indicated that SMN (0.1 mg L−1) could be degraded rapidly by
32
VUV/UV/chlorine, and a synergism was observed between the VUV/UV and
33
UV/chlorine processes. Photon-fluence based rate constants of SMN degradation were
34
determined to be 6.76 × 103 and 8.51 × 103 m2 einstein−1 at chlorine doses of 0.05 and
35
0.5 mg L−1, respectively. The presence of natural organic matter in real waters
36
significantly inhibited SMN degradation. In addition, pilot tests were conducted to
37
explore the practical performance of the VUV/UV/chlorine process, thereby allowing
38
electrical energy per order to be calculated for cost evaluation. The effect of flow
39
pattern on photoreactor efficiency was also analyzed by computational fluid dynamics
40
simulations. Both bench- and pilot-scale tests have demonstrated that the
41
VUV/UV/chlorine process, as a new AOP, has potential applications to trace organic
42
pollutant removal in small-scale water treatment.
43
Key words: vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV); VUV/UV/chlorine; advanced oxidation
44
process; trace organic pollutant; water treatment
45
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■ INTRODUCTION
47
In recent years, the frequent occurrence of trace organic pollutants in water has
48
received increasing attention because these pollutants threaten aquatic ecosystems and
49
human health.1,2 Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), which generate abundant
50
hydroxyl radicals (HO•) of a high oxidation potential (2.80 eV),3−5 can effectively
51
degrade recalcitrant organic constituents. Since ultraviolet (UV) irradiation has been
52
widely used in water treatment, which has merits of low by-product formation, small
53
footprint and high efficiency,6,7 UV-based AOPs (or UV-AOPs) are regarded as highly
54
efficient technologies for trace organic pollutant removal in drinking water,
55
wastewater, and reclaimed water.8−10
56
Commercially
available
UV light
sources
include
low-pressure
(LP),
57
medium-pressure (MP) and vacuum-UV/UV (VUV/UV) mercury lamps as well as
58
UV light emitting diodes (UV-LEDs). The VUV/UV lamp is characterized with
59
emission wavelengths at 185 and 254 nm, and has manufacturing and operational
60
costs similar to those of a conventional LP lamp.11 Thus, a photoreactor using a
61
VUV/UV lamp as the light source has advantages over that using a conventional LP
62
lamp in disinfection and trace organic pollutant removal for two reasons: (1) VUV
63
photolysis of water can generate additional HO• (eq 1),12 and (2) VUV irradiation may
64
induce a synergistic effect on treatment efficiency in the UV-AOPs.
65
hv185
H2 O → HO • + H •
(1)
66
A previous study has revealed that the VUV/UV/chlorine process is highly
67
efficient for methylene blue (MB) degradation in water.13 The MB degradation rate in
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the VUV/UV/chlorine process was higher than a sum of those in the individual
69
VUV/UV and UV/chlorine processes, indicating a synergistic effect on pollutant
70
removal. The observed synergism was mainly ascribed to: (1) the addition of chlorine
71
inhibited the recombination of HO• to produce H2O2, which would otherwise occur
72
prominently near the outer surface of the protective quartz sleeve where a highest HO•
73
concentration was expected; and (2) the simultaneously formed, longer-lived
74
secondary radicals (e.g., OCl•) could degrade effectively the target pollutant as well.
75
The new VUV/UV/chlorine process involves two commonly-used water treatment
76
processes (i.e., VUV/UV and chlorine), so it has a high potential for drinking water
77
treatment.
78
A mini-fluidic VUV/UV photoreaction system (MVPS), which enables an
79
accurate determination of VUV and UV photon-fluences, considerably facilitates the
80
kinetic and mechanistic studies on photochemical degradation of organic pollutants at
81
bench-scale.14 In addition, pilot tests are inevitable for performance and cost
82
evaluations and reactor optimal design. Considering the short transmittance of VUV
83
light in water [about 90% VUV photons were absorbed by a 5.5 mm deionized (DI)
84
water layer], the VUV/UV/chlorine process is targeted at small-scale water treatment
85
(e.g., water supplies in rural and remote areas, or point of use applications).
86
In this study, the feasibility of VUV/UV/chlorine for enhanced removal of trace
87
organic pollutants in water was investigated at both bench- and pilot-scales.
88
Sulfamethazine (SMN), a sulfonamide antibiotic frequently detected at trace levels in
89
aquatic environments,15,16 was selected as a model pollutant. Bench-scale tests were
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carried out on the MVPS to explore the kinetics and mechanism of SMN degradation
91
by VUV/UV/chlorine. The influences of chlorine dose, solution pH, and water matrix
92
were also examined. Thereafter, pilot-scale tests were conducted to evaluate the
93
performance in annular reactors and energy consumption (i.e., electrical energy per
94
order, EEO) of this new AOP for trace organic pollutant removal from drinking water.
95
■ EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
96
Bench-scale Tests. The MVPS, with an 8 W cold-cathode LP lamp (arc length =
97
200 mm, Wanhua Co., Zhejiang, China) as the light source, was utilized as the
98
bench-scale photoreactor (Figure S2). Details of its construction and the monitoring
99
micro-fluorescent silica detector were provided previously.13,17 A straight synthetic
100
quartz tube [VUV/UV tube, high VUV transmittance (roughly 60% per millimeter)]
101
and a straight Ti-doped quartz tube (UV tube, opaque to VUV irradiation) were used
102
for VUV/UV and UV exposures, respectively. Water samples were collected from the
103
solution container at various experimental times, so that a range of exposure fluences
104
could be obtained. A reduction equivalent exposure time (tree, s) was defined as the
105
total experimental time (t, s) multiplied by the ratio of the exposure volume of the
106
quartz tube (πr2L, m3) to the total sample volume (V, m3).13 Hence, the photon
107
fluences (einstein m–2) for VUV (Fp,VUV), UV (Fp,UV) and total exposure (Fp,total) were
108
calculated as follows:14,18
π r 2h
109
t ree =
110
0 Fp,UV = Ep,UV tree
V
t
(2) (3)
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0 Fp,VUV = Ep,VUV tree
(4)
112
Fp,total = Fp,UV + Fp,VUV
(5)
113
where r and h are the radius (1.2 mm) and length (100 mm) of the VUV/UV and UV
114
tubes, respectively; and Ep,UV and Ep,VUV are the UV photon fluence rate (einstein
115
m−2 s−1) in the UV (or VUV/UV) tube and the VUV photon fluence rate (einstein m−2
116
s−1) in the VUV/UV tube, respectively. Ep,UV and Ep,VUV were determined to be
117
3.07 × 10−4 and 0.27 × 10−4 einstein m−2 s−1, respectively, whose determined method
118
was described in a previous paper.14 Note that the term symbols follow those
119
previously recommended.13,14
0
0
0
0
120
Pilot-scale Tests. To evaluate the practical performance of the VUV/UV/chlorine
121
process for trace organic pollutant removal, pilot testes were conducted in an annular
122
stainless steel photoreactor (inner diameter = 35 mm, inner length = 950 mm), which
123
contained a 105 W VUV/UV mercury lamp (Foshan Comwin Co. China, length = 780
124
mm) centered inside a high-purity quartz sleeve (outer diameter = 23 mm), as
125
illustrated in Figure 1. DI water (30 L), spiked with trace SMN ([SMN]0 = 0.05 mg
126
L−1), was stored in a tank and pumped through the pilot photoreactor at various flow
127
rates (Qs). Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis was performed to explore
128
the effect of flow pattern on the photoreactor efficiency (Text S1). In certain tests,
129
humic acid (HA, 5 mg L−1 as DOC) was added to examine the competition of natural
130
organic matter (NOM) for reactive species. Influent and effluent samples were
131
collected to determine the removal efficiency of SMN.
132
Figure 1
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Chemicals and Analysis. All chemicals used without otherwise stated were of
134
reagent grade or higher. SMN was obtained from Thermo Fisher Scientific (Fair Lawn,
135
NJ, USA) and dissolved in water buffered with phosphate (5 mM, pH 5−8) or borate
136
(5 mM, pH 10). Benzoic acid (BA), HA (technical grade) and NaCl were purchased
137
from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). Free chlorine was prepared freshly from a
138
stock NaOCl solution (10−15% by weight, Sigma-Aldrich), whose concentration was
139
measured by the N,N-diethyl-p-phenylenediamine colorimetric method on a UV-vis
140
spectrophotometer (Hach DR6000, USA).19 All solutions in the bench-scale tests were
141
prepared with ultrapure water produced from a Milli-Q system (Advantage A10,
142
Millipore, USA) unless otherwise stated, and DI water was used for all pilot tests. In
143
addition, to evaluate the performance of the VUV/UV/chlorine process for real waters,
144
a surface water from Miyun reservoir (MYR) and a granular carbon-filtered water
145
from a local drinking water treatment plant (WTP) were selected. The real waters
146
were filtered through 0.45-µm membranes and stored at 4 °C until use.
147
SMN
and
BA
were mass
analyzed
using
spectrometry
ultra-high-performance and
148
chromatography-tandem
149
chromatography (Text S1). The principle degradation products were evaluated by
150
using by using ultra-performance liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight
151
mass spectrometry (UPLC/Q-TOF-MS, Alliance-2695 Waters, Text S1). To scavenge
152
reactive species and identify their contributions to trace organic pollutant removal, 10
153
mM tert-butanol (TBA, Sigma-Aldrich) or 0.5 mM nitrobenzene (NB, Sigma-Aldrich)
154
were added individually to relevant reaction solutions in advance (the preliminary
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tests for the applied concentrations of TBA and NB were described in Text S1). In
156
addition, the antibacterial activity variation of SMN during VUV/UV/chlorine process
157
was discussed. The bioassay was carried out by using Escherichia coli ATCC 25922
158
(E. coli) as a challenge microorganism and the initial SMN concentration was selected
159
as 10 mg L-1. The detailed experimental process was described in a previous study.14
160
■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
161
SMN Degradation by VUV/UV/chlorine. Figure 2 shows comparatively the
162
degradation kinetics of SMN ([SMN]0 = 0.1 mg L−1) by UV/chlorine, VUV/UV and
163
VUV/UV/chlorine. Chlorine doses of 0.05 (Figure 2a) and 0.5 mg L−1 (Figure 2b)
164
were selected as common residual chlorine concentrations at the tap and in WTP
165
effluent, respectively. Only slight SMN degradation was observed in the UV/chlorine
166
process at [chlorine]0 = 0.05 mg L−1. The notably higher reaction rate constant
167
(k′VUV/UV = 4.00 × 103 m2 einstein−1) in the VUV/UV process could be ascribed to the
168
additional oxidation by HO•. Note that in this study, photon-based fluence, rather than
169
the commonly used energy-based fluence, should be used to properly compare the
170
photochemical kinetics involving two wavelengths (i.e., 185 and 254 nm).18
171
Figure 2
172
Previous research found a synergistic effect on MB (5 mg L-1) degradation by
173
VUV/UV/chlorine.13 For SMN with a considerably lower concentration (0.1 mg L-1)
174
in this study, a degradation rate (k′VUV/UV/Cl) of 8.51 × 103 m2 einstein−1 was achieved
175
by VUV/UV/chlorine, which is again greater than the sum of the degradation rates in
176
the UV/chlorine (k′UV/Cl) and VUV/UV (k′VUV/UV) processes (Figure 2). Moreover, the 8
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Figure S3 shows that the chlorine decays in VUV/UV/chlorine faster than that in
178
UV/chlorine process. The results demonstrate that synergism was also evident in the
179
degradation of trace organic pollutant by VUV/UV/chlorine.
180
The effect of chlorine dose on the UV/chlorine and VUV/UV/chlorine processes
181
is manifested in Figure S4a. Both k′UV/Cl and k′VUV/UV/Cl increased with increasing
182
chlorine dose, and the latter clearly increased faster. To assess the synergistic effect of
183
VUV/UV/chlorine, as compared to the total performance of VUV/UV and
184
UV/chlorine, an enhancement factor (R) was defined as follows:
185
RCl =
′ kVUV/UV/Cl ′ ′ + kVUV/UV kUV/Cl
−1
(6)
186
As shown in Figure S4b, the R value increased from 0 to 1.42 as the chlorine dose
187
changed from 0 to 1.0 mg L−1, indicating that the VUV/UV/chlorine process should
188
be effective at common chlorine doses for drinking water disinfection. The higher the
189
chlorine dose, the stronger the enhancement.
190
Contributions of Reactive Species to SMN Degradation. HO• and reactive
191
chlorine species (RCS, e.g., Cl•, ClO•, and Cl2•−) are principal reactive species in the
192
VUV/UV/chlorine process. TBA has a high reactivity toward HO•, Cl• and ClO•,9 and
193
NB reacts rapidly with HO• but slowly with RCS.9,20 As shown in Table 1, after
194
adding 10 mM TBA and 0.5 mM NB in the UV/chlorine process, k′UV/Cl decreased
195
from 0.51 × 103 to 0.04 × 103 and 0.25 × 103 m2 einstein−1, respectively. It implies that
196
the relative contributions of HO• and principle RCS (including Cl• and ClO•) to SMN
197
degradation were about 50% and 41%, respectively, and the residual 9% could be
198
ascribed to the direct UV photolysis and the oxidation of Cl2•− that rarely react with 9
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TBA.9 In the VUV/UV/chlorine process, k′VUV/UV/Cl decreased from 8.51 × 103 to 2.58
200
× 103 and 4.19 × 103 m2 einstein−1, respectively, after adding 10 mM TBA and 0.5 mM
201
NB. Since TBA could scavenge HO•, Cl• and ClO•, about 32% of SMN degradation
202
might be attributed to the direct VUV photolysis and the oxidation of Cl2•−. HO• and
203
principle RCS (including Cl• and ClO•) contributed 49% and 19% to the SMN
204
degradation, respectively.
205
Effects of pH, NOM, Chloride and Bicarbonate. SMN degradation by
206
VUV/UV/chlorine was examined comparatively at pH values of 5.0, 7.0, 8.0 and 10.0,
207
with a maximum k′VUV/UV/Cl observed at pH 7.0 (Figure 3). The pH effect on SMN
208
degradation was mainly attributed to the different forms of chlorine, SMN, phosphate
209
(buffer), and HO• under various pH conditions. On the one side, because of the
210
dissociation equilibrium between HOCl and OCl− (pKa = 7.5 at 25 °C), chlorine
211
photolysis at a lower pH has a higher quantum yield for reactive radicals, which
212
enhanced the SMN degradation.21,22 On the other side, the anionic (SMN−) and neutral
213
(SMN0) forms of SMN (Figure S5) have different degradation rates with HO•, which
214
caused an inhibited SMN degradation with a decreasing pH.14 In addition, because the
215
reaction rate of H2PO4- and HPO42- with HO• are 2 × 104 and 1.5 × 105 M-1 s-1,
216
respectively, increasing pH could cause a higher competition of HO• and decrease the
217
k′VUV/UV/Cl.23 As a result, the synergistic effect of VUV/UV/chlorine on SMN
218
degradation was maximized near pH 7.0.
219
Figure 3
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A relatively lower k′VUV/UV/Cl was found at pH 10.0 than that at pH 5.0 (Figure 3),
221
implying that the dissociation of HOCl/OCl− had a stronger impact on this process
222
than that of SMN. In addition, the dissociation of HO• into oxygen anion radical (O•−)
223
(eq 7)24 could reduce the HO• concentration, thus decreasing the k′VUV/UV/Cl at a higher
224
pH to some extent. It was also found that MB was degraded by VUV/UV/chlorine
225
more effectively at pH 5.0 than at pH 10.0.13
226
HO• ↔ H+ + O •− , pKa = 11.9
(7)
227
Table 1 shows that 1 and 10 mM chloride additions resulted in slight reductions
228
of k′VUV/UV/Cl, while 0.1 and 1 mM bicarbonate additions obviously increased
229
k′VUV/UV/Cl. As a common ion in surface waters, chloride can scavenge reactive species
230
(e.g., HO• and Cl•) to form secondary radicals such as ClOH•− and Cl2•− (eqs 8 and 9)9
231
with relatively lower oxidation potentials. Thus, the presence of chloride in water will
232
somewhat reduce the rate of organic pollutant degradation. Yet, the bicarbonate can
233
scavenge reactive species to form CO3•− (eqs 10 and 11) that has high reaction rate
234
with the compounds containing aromatic amine groups (e.g., SMN).25 Hence the
235
bicarbonate addition could enhance the SMN degradation. In addition, HA (to
236
simulate NOM) addition induced an obvious inhibition on SMN degradation (Table 1),
237
because it competed significantly for the reactive species against SMN (kHO•,NOM = 2.5
238
× 104 L mgC−1 s−1, kCl•,NOM = 1.3 × 104 L mgC−1 s−1).9,26 In the presence of 3 mg L−1
239
HA, the SMN degradation rate dropped from 8.51 × 103 to 1.12 × 103 m2 einstein−1.
240
HO• + Cl− → ClOH •−
(8)
241
Cl• + Cl− → Cl2•−
(9)
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HO• + HCO3− → H2O + CO3•−
(10)
243
Cl• + HCO3− → HCl + CO3•−
(11)
244
Effect of Water Matrix. To examine water matrix effect on SMN degradation by
245
VUV/UV/chlorine, two real waters were employed including MYR and WTP with
246
their water quality given in Table S1. For the MYR water, because of a relatively high
247
DOC content (i.e., 4.2 mg L−1) competing strongly for reactive species, a low
248
degradation rate of SMN (0.86 × 103 m2 einstein−1) was observed at 0.05 mg L−1
249
chlorine dose in the VUV/UV/chlorine process (Figure 4a). By raising the chlorine
250
dose to 0.5 mg L−1, there was only a slight increase in the SMN degradation rate (0.94
251
× 103 m2 einstein−1), indicating that chlorine had an insignificant impact on SMN
252
degradation, and hence the VUV/UV process played a dominant role.
253
Figure 4
254
The WTP water had a lower DOC content (i.e., 2.6 mg L−1) than that of the MYR
255
water, so a considerably higher degradation rate of SMN (2.84 × 103 m2 einstein−1)
256
was obtained at 0.05 mg L−1 chlorine dose in the VUV/UV/chlorine process (Figure
257
4b). Moreover, it should be pointed out that the DOC composition in the WTP water
258
was also much different from that in the MYR water. The hydrophobic and large
259
molecule fraction of NOM in the WTP water was generally removed by the
260
coagulation, sedimentation, sand filtration and granular activated carbon filtration
261
processes, leaving mostly the hydrophilic and small molecule fraction which has a
262
much less reactivity toward chlorine and reactive species.27 This is also evident when
263
comparing the NOM effects in the WTP water (Figure 4b) and in the synthetic water
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(Table 1) with a similar DOC content (i.e., 2.6 vs. 3.0 mg L−1). A further increase in
265
the chlorine dose to 0.5 mg L−1 made the SMN degradation rate quickly go up to 4.89
266
× 103 m2 einstein−1. Figure 4b also shows that with a photon fluence of 0.6 × 10−3
267
einstein m−2 (i.e., a very short exposure time of 1.3 s), SMN degradation could reach
268
natural log removals of 1.9 (85%) and 3.2 (96%) at chorine doses of 0.05 and 0.5 mg
269
L−1, respectively.
270
Antibacterial Activity Assessment. The antibacterial activity removal of SMN
271
during the VUV/UV/chlorine was evaluated by the bioassay, which is calculated as
272
follows:
273
I ( %) =
Amax − A ×100 Amax − Amin
(12)
274
where I (%) represents the growth inhibition of E. coli; Amax, Amin and A are the
275
absorbance of the positive control (i.e., no growth inhibition), the negative control
276
(i.e., 100% growth inhibition) and the test sample, respectively.
277
Figure S6 shows the antibacterial activity variation of SMN solution (10 mg L−1)
278
during the VUV/UV/chlorine treatment. The results indicate that the I value decayed
279
with increasing irradiated photon fluence from 0 to 9.96 × 103 einstein m−2, indicating
280
that the VUV/UV/chlorine process could eliminate the antibacterial activity
281
effectively. The decay rate of I was lower than that of SMN, and I remained about 12%
282
even with exposure of 9.96 × 103 einstein m-2 fluence, implying that the treated
283
solution still had certain residual antibacterial activity although the parent compound
284
(i.e., SMN molecule) was removed.
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Pilot Tests and EEO Calculation. Pilot tests were carried out with an annular
286
photoreactor to evaluate the practical performance and calculate EEO values of the
287
VUV/UV/chlorine process. Figure S7 shows that at [chlorine]0 = 0.5 mg L−1, the
288
removal efficiency of SMN ([SMN]0 = 0.05 mg L−1) decreased slightly with
289
decreasing Q for both VUV/UV and VUV/UV/chlorine in the absence of NOM. This
290
is reasonable because a high Q results in a short exposure time (or fluence). A higher
291
removal efficiency of SMN was achieved by VUV/UV/chlorine than by VUV/UV. At
292
Q = 0.75 m3 h−1, the removal efficiency increased with the chlorine dose increasing
293
from 0.05 to 5 mg L−1 in the VUV/UV/chlorine process (inset of Figure S7). As
294
expected, in the presence of 5 mg L−1 HA, the removal efficiency of SMN dropped
295
significantly at each Q.
296
EEO has been applied as a figure-of-merit to evaluate the energy consumption of
297
AOPs when the target pollutant concentration is low (< 100 mg L−1) so that its decay
298
follows pseudo-first-order kinetics.28 By using the pilot test data, the EEO values at
299
various Q values and chlorine doses were calculated (eq 13) and are summarized in
300
Table 2. The equivalent energy consumption for chlorine production (ECl) was
301
assumed to be 0.005 kWh mg L−1 that could be expressed in terms of EEO calculation.
302
EEO =
ECl [chlorine] P + 3600Q log([SMN]o / [SMN]) log([SMN]o / [SMN])
(13)
303
where P = electrical power (kW); t = exposure time (s); and V = volume of water
304
treated (m3). Because the EEO simultaneously takes account of Q and t, one should
305
expect the same EEO at various Q values. However, Table 2 shows that for the
306
VUV/UV process, the EEO decreased with decreasing Q, which could arise from a 14
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307
special characteristic of the pilot photoreactor. Previous studies found that because of
308
a high absorption coefficient (1.8 cm−1) of the 185 nm VUV light,29 a high
309
concentration of HO• was generated and accumulated in the near-lamp region of the
310
photoreactor.13 The HO• had difficulty in diffusing to the far-lamp region so that H2O2
311
could be formed, which wasted a certain portion of the VUV irradiation.29 A higher Q
312
could promote the mass transfer of reactants (e.g., SMN and HO•) in the photoreactor,
313
so a higher SMN removal efficiency (or a lower EEO) was obtained.
314
By using CFD, water velocity (v) at each node in the pilot photoreactor was
315
simulated. This vector v could be divided into two fractions: the axial velocity va
316
(lamp axis direction) and the radial velocity vr (photoreactor radial direction). The
317
profiles of va and vr at various Q values in the central cross-section of the pilot
318
photoreactor in this study are illustrated in Figure S8. The average vr (vave,r) and the
319
relative average va (v’ave,a), which is equal to the average va in a certain water layer
320
normalized by that in the pilot photoreactor, are shown in Figure 5 for various water
321
layers. Results indicated that the v’ave,a at the near-sleeve or near-photoreactor-wall
322
water layer was lower than that in the central water layer. By contrast, the vave,r in the
323
central water layer was lower than that in the layer near reactor wall or quartz sleeve.
324
With increasing Q, both v’ave,a and vave,r at the near-sleeve water layer increased,
325
implying that a higher Q could enhance convection between the near- and far-lamp
326
regions to increase the pollutant removal.
327
Figure 5
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328
For the VUV/UV/chlorine process, a higher Q also promoted the mass transfer of
329
HOCl/OCl−, which could further enhance the reactive species formation. The
330
enhancement of Q on the EEO was larger than that for the VUV/UV process (Table 2).
331
Meanwhile, a higher chlorine dose could induce a lower EEO value because of the
332
stronger synergism of the VUV/UV/chlorine process. As a comparison, much higher
333
EEO values for the VUV/UV/H2O2 process were observed under similar test
334
conditions (Table S2). It is also noted that the pilot tests yielded obviously higher EEO
335
values in the presence of 5 mg L−1 HA for the VUV/UV/chlorine process. However,
336
as aforementioned, the DOC in the sand-filtered water of WTPs has a much less
337
reactivity toward chlorine and reactive species than the HA spiked in this study, and
338
meanwhile, its concentration usually ranges from 0.5 to 1.5 mg L−1 in most cases.
339
Therefore,
340
VUV/UV/chlorine process is applied to real water treatment.
considerably
lower
EEO
values
can
be
expected
when
the
341
Discussion on the Combinatorial Application of MVPS and Pilot
342
Photoreactor for VUV/UV-AOP studies. This study demonstrates that the
343
VUV/UV-AOPs (e.g., VUV/UV/chlorine) have a good potential on trace organic
344
pollutant removal from water. The pilot photoreactor allows an evaluation of the
345
practical performance of VUV/UV-AOPs quickly and intuitively; but it is not suitable
346
for fundamental rate constant determination. The MVPS provides an accurate and fast
347
determination of photochemical kinetic parameters because of its unique optical
348
construction allowing accurate measurements of UV and VUV fluences. However,
349
since the UV tube (or VUV/UV tube) cannot capture all photons emitted from the
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350
light source, the MVPS is not suitable for the energy consumption calculation.
351
Therefore, the combinatorial application of the MVPS and the pilot photoreactor
352
provides a good approach for VUV/UV-AOP studies. In addition, although with the
353
similar irradiated 254 nm/185 nm photon ratio, because of the different constructions
354
of the MVPS and industrial reactors, one can suspect that if the special effects
355
obtained in MVPS (e.g., synergistic enhancement effect of VUV/UV/chlorine) can
356
happen in practical application. Table 2 shows that the EEO values of VUV/UV are
357
1.38 – 1.96 times higher than those of VUV/UV/chlorine at chlorine dose of 0.5 mg
358
L-1. It implies that the synergistic enhancement also occurred in the pilot reactor, and
359
validates the results from MVPS.
360
Discussion on the Potential Applications of VUV/UV/chlorine. In recent years,
361
trace organic pollutant removal has become an important issue in water treatment.
362
Ozonation has been used as an oxidation process of the trace organic pollutant in
363
many large water treatment plants followed by biological active activated carbon.
364
However, for small-scale water supply systems, the ozone application is usually
365
uneconomic. The VUV/UV/chlorine process involves two existing water treatment
366
methods (i.e., VUV/UV irradiation and chlorination). Moreover, the chlorine doses of
367
0.05 and 0.5 mg L−1 match those commonly used in water treatment plants. Therefore,
368
this new oxidation/disinfection technology can be conveniently applied to new and
369
existing small-scale water treatment systems only by installing a VUV/UV
370
photoreactor.
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371
The formation of chlorinated by-products (CBPs) in SMN degradation by
372
VUV/UV/chlorine was evaluated by using ultra-performance liquid chromatography
373
quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC/Q-TOF-MS). A high initial
374
concentration of SMN (10 mg L−1) was applied. According to the chromatogram (in
375
Figure S9) and mass spectrum of SMN degradation in VUV/UV/chlorine process with
376
various photon fluences, five by-products were summarized in Table S3 and possible
377
degradation pathway was proposed in Figure S10.
378
Because the HO• and RCS contributed to the organic pollutant degradation in
379
VUV/UV/chlorine process, the principle HO• oxidative products were found,
380
including P1 (C6H10N3O, m/z 140), P2 (C6H10N3, m/z 124), P3 (m/z 295) and P4 (m/z
381
295). These products were also found during the SMN degradation by UV/H2O2 and
382
VUV/UV processes, whose dominant oxidant was HO•.14,30 With the RCS attack, a
383
CBP (P5, C12H12N4Cl, m/z 275) was found at the retention time of 1.762 min. The
384
possible reaction involved the SO2 elimination driven by direct photolysis and the
385
substitution of Cl on the amine. Nassar et al. also found this product during the
386
chlorination of SMN, and pointed out that the toxicity of this product is not higher
387
than that of SMN.31 Therefore, because of the low concentration of SMN in drinking
388
water and low toxicity of the principle CBP, SMN removal by VUV/UV/chlorine
389
could not introduce obvious toxicity increase as compared to the existing processes
390
(e.g., VUV/UV or UV/chlorine).
391
The nitrite formation has been paid attention during the irradiation of
392
low-wavelength UV ( 99%). b
Not detected.
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Table 2. EEO Values Determined in the Pilot Photoreactor for SMN (0.05 mg L−1) Degradation by VUV/UV and VUV/UV/chlorine EEO (kWh m−3 order−1) Q
[chlorine]0
(m3 h−1)
(mg L−1)
a
VUV/UV
VUV/UV/chlorine
VUV/UV/chlorine
DI water
DI water
with 5 mg L−1 HA
1.02
0.50
0.137 ± 0.001
0.070 ± 0.005
1.433 ± 0.128
0.75
0.50
0.162 ± 0.001
0.094 ± 0.006
1.600 ± 0.114
0.42
0.05
−a
0.204 ± 0.008
−
0.42
0.50
0.220 ± 0.002
0.159 ± 0.007
2.505 ± 0.026
0.42
5.00
−
0.150 ± 0.006
−
Not detected.
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Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the pilot VUV/UV photoreactor.
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(a)
ln([SMN]/[SMN]o)
0
-4
-8
k' (m2 einstein-1) UV/chlorine, k'UV/Cl = 0.08 x 103 VUV/UV, k'VUV/UV = 4.00 x 103 VUV/UV/chlorine, k'VUV/UV/Cl = 6.76 x 103
(b)
ln([SMN]/[SMN]o)
0
-5
-10
k' (m2 einstein-1) UV/chlorine, k'UV/Cl = 0.51 x 103 VUV/UV, k'VUV/UV = 4.00 x 103 VUV/UV/chlorine, k'VUV/UV/Cl = 8.51 x 103 0.0 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.1 2.4 2.7
Photon fluence (x 10-3 einstein m-2)
Figure 2. SMN degradation by UV/chlorine, VUV/UV and VUV/UV/chlorine with chlorine doses of 0.05 (a) and 0.5 (b) mg L−1. Conditions: [SMN]0 = 0.1 mg L−1, pH = 7.0.
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10000
2
-1
k' (m einstein )
8000
6000
4000
2000
0
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
pH
Figure 3. Photo-fluence based rate constant (k′) as a function of pH for SMN degradation by VUV/UV/chlorine. Conditions: [SMN]0 = 0.1 mg L−1 , [chlorine]0 = 0.5 mg L−1. Each data point (k′) represents the linear regression result of six experimental data points (R2 > 99%).
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0.0
(a)
ln([SMN]/[SMN]o)
-0.5 -1.0 -1.5
2
-1
k' (m einstein ) 3
k'UV/Cl = 0.03 x 10 , [chlorine]0 = 0.05 mg L
-2.0
3
k'UV/Cl = 0.10 x 10 , [chlorine]0 = 0.5 mg L -2.5
-1
-1
3
k'VUV/UV/Cl = 0.86 x 10 , [chlorine]0 = 0.05 mg L 3
k'VUV/UV/Cl = 0.94 x 10 , [chlorine]0 = 0.5 mg L
-3.0
-1
-1
ln([SMN/SMN]o)
0
(b)
-2
-4 k' (m2 einstein-1)
k'UV/Cl = 0.02 x 103, [chlorine]0 = 0.05 mg L-1
-6
k'UV/Cl = 0.44 x 103, [chlorine]0 = 0.5 mg L-1 k'VUV/UV/Cl = 2.85 x 103, [chlorine]0 = 0.05 mg L-1
-8
k'VUV/UV/Cl = 4.89 x 103, [chlorine]0 = 0.5 mg L-1 0.0
0.3
0.6
0.9
1.2
1.5
1.8
-3
2.1
2.4
2.7
-2
Photon fluence (x 10 einstein m )
Figure 4. SMN degradation by UV/chlorine and VUV/UV/chlorine at chlorine doses of 0.5 and 0.05 mg L−1 in MYR (a) and WTP (b) waters. Conditions: [SMN]0 = 0.1 mg L−1, pH = 7.0.
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3
2.4 11.5 < r < 12.0 mm 12.5 < r < 13.5 mm 14.5 < r < 15.5 mm 16.5 < r < 17.5 mm
2.0
v'ave,a
1.6
12.0 < r < 12.5 mm 13.5 < r < 14.5 mm 15.5 < r < 16.5 mm
2
1.2
1
0.8
vave, r (x 10-3 m s-1)
Water layer
0.4
0
0.0
1.02
0.75
1.02
0.42
0.75
0.42
Q (m3 h-1) Figure 5. Estimated relative average axial velocity (v’ave,a) and average radial velocity (vave,r) values at various water layers and flow rates in the central cross-section of the pilot photoreactor.
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TOC Art
Bench-scale test
Pilot-scale test
ln([SMN/SMNo])
0
-4
-8
3
2
-1
UV/chlorine k'UV/Cl = 0.080 x 10 m einstein 3 2 -1 VUV/UV k'VUV/UV = 4.000 x 10 m einstein 3 2 -1 VUV/UV/chlorine k'VUV/UV/Cl = 6.760 x 10 m einstein
0.0
0.3
0.6
0.9
1.2
1.5 -3
1.8
2.1
2.4
2.7
-2
Photon fluence (x 10 einstein m )
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