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Disintegration of Waste-Activated Sludge by ThermallyActivated Persulfates for Enhanced Dewaterability Min Sik Kim, Ki-Myeong Lee, Hyung-Eun Kim, Hye-Jin Lee, Changsoo Lee, and Changha Lee Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b00019 • Publication Date (Web): 07 Jun 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 11, 2016
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Environmental Science & Technology
Disintegration of Waste Activated Sludge by Thermally-Activated Persulfates for Enhanced Dewaterability
Min Sik Kim, Ki-Myeong Lee, Hyung-Eun Kim, Hye-Jin Lee, Changsoo Lee, Changha Lee*
School of Urban and Environmental Engineering, and KIST-UNIST-Ulsan Center for Convergent Materials (KUUC), Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), 50 UNIST-gil, Ulju-gun, Ulsan 689-798, Republic of Korea
*Corresponding author Phone: +82-52-217-2812 Fax: +82-52-217-2809 E-mail:
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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TOC/Abstract art
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ABSTRACT
2 3
Oxidation by persulfates at elevated temperatures (thermally activated persulfates)
4
disintegrates bacterial cells and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) composing waste-
5
activated sludge (WAS), facilitating the subsequent sludge dewatering. The WAS
6
disintegration process by thermally activated persulfates exhibited different behaviors
7
depending on the types of persulfates employed, i.e., peroxymonosulfate (PMS) versus
8
peroxydisulfate (PDS). The decomposition of PMS in WAS proceeded via a two-phase
9
reaction, an instantaneous decomposition by the direct reaction with the WAS components
10
followed by a gradual thermal decay. During the PMS treatment, the WAS filterability
11
(measured by capillary suction time) increased in the initial stage but rapidly stagnated and
12
even decreased as the reaction proceeded. In contrast, the decomposition of PDS exhibited
13
pseudo first-order decay during the entire reaction, resulting in the greater and steadier
14
increase in the WAS filterability compared to the case of PMS. The treatment by PMS
15
produced a high portion of true colloidal solids (< 1 µm) and eluted soluble and bound EPS,
16
which is detrimental to the WAS filterability. However, the observations regarding the
17
dissolved organic carbon, ammonium ions, and volatile suspended solids collectively
18
indicated that the treatment by PMS more effectively disintegrated WAS compared to PDS,
19
leading to higher weight (or volume) reduction by post-centrifugation.
20
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INTRODUCTION
22 23
The management of waste activated sludge (WAS) has become one of the main
24
challenges in wastewater treatment plants as the production of WAS continues to increase
25
worldwide along with the increasing demand for sanitation and water treatment facilities.
26
WAS management accounts for up to approximately 60% of the operating cost of the
27
wastewater treatment plant.1 To reduce the costs for the storage, transport, and disposal of
28
produced WAS, the volume of sludge must be reduced by a dewatering process. WAS
29
disintegration by proper treatments can facilitate the dewatering process. These sludge
30
disintegration treatments can also enhance the efficacy of subsequent processes for WAS
31
recycling such as biogas production by anaerobic digestion,2 nutrient and energy recovery,3
32
and composting.4 However, the disintegration of the cells composing WAS is not easy due to
33
the rigid structures of cell walls and membranes and extracellular polymeric substances
34
(EPS).5
35
As options for WAS disintegration, oxidative treatment methods including chlorination,6
36
ozonation,7 and advanced oxidation processes (AOPs)8-10 have been suggested. Among them,
37
AOPs, which utilize a highly reactive and nonselective hydroxyl radical (•OH) (Eo(•OH,
38
H+/H2O) = 2.813 VNHE11), are effective tools for disrupting rigid cell membranes and
39
simultaneously destructing EPS and other polymeric substances in WAS. Several AOPs such
40
as the Fenton process,8 microwave-assisted peroxidation,9 and TiO2 photocatalysis10 have
41
been demonstrated to improve the dewaterability (often expressed as filterability measured by
42
capillary suction time), settleability, and bioavailability (for anaerobic digestion) of WAS as
43
well as to remove refractory chemicals and pathogens in the sludge. 2
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Recently, oxidation technologies using sulfate radical anion (SO4•−) have emerged as
45
alternatives to AOPs because SO4•− is a highly reactive oxidant (E0(SO4•−/SO42−) = 2.43
46
VNHE12) that can be generated by manifold pathways. SO4•− is usually produced from
47
persulfates (i.e., peroxymonosulfate (PMS) and peroxydisulfate (PDS)) by thermal
48
activation,13,14 UV photolysis,15,16 alkali activation,17,18 and transition metal catalysis.19-22
49
These persulfate-based technologies have been extensively studied for the degradation of
50
organic contaminants in wastewater or groundwater.21 Several studies have also demonstrated
51
that iron-catalyzed and thermally-activated persulfate oxidation can be applied to WAS
52
treatment for the enhancement of filterability and settleability.24-27 However, there is still a
53
lack of available information on the behavior of WAS disintegration by persulfate oxidation.
54
In particular, the effect of persulfate oxidation on EPS and the micro-floc structures in WAS
55
and in turn on WAS dewaterability is barely known.
56
The objectives of the present study are i) to assess the potential of thermally activated
57
persulfate oxidation to disintegrate and enhance the dewaterability of WAS and ii) to compare
58
the characteristic behaviors of the sludge disintegration by the two persulfates (i.e., PMS vs.
59
PDS) in terms of EPS, micro-flocs, solubilization, and the reduction in VSS, weight, and
60
volume.
61 62
EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
63 64
Materials. Concentrated WAS was collected from a full-scale wastewater treatment plant
65
(WWTP) located in Ulsan, South Korea. The WWTP employs the combined sequential batch
66
reactor (SBR)-anaerobic/anoxic/oxic (A2O) process, treating 47,000 m3 of domestic sewage 3
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per day, and the sampling point was the end of the secondary clarifier. The collected WAS
68
sample was thickened to the required solid concentration (approximately 15 g VSS/L) and
69
stored at 4˚C for less than 2 days prior to the experiments. The representative characteristics
70
of the WAS are shown in the supporting information (Table S1). All chemicals were of
71
reagent grade and used without further purification. Potassium peroxymonosulfate (PMS,
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KHSO5 as Oxone®, 2KHSO5·KHSO4·K2SO4, DuPont Co., USA) and sodium peroxydisulfate
73
(PDS, Na2S2O8) were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich Co. (USA). Stock solutions of PMS (300
74
mM) and PDS (300 mM) were prepared prior to the experiments.
75 76
Procedures for WAS Treatment. The WAS treatment experiments were conducted in a
77
batch reactor using a 500-mL Erlenmeyer flask with 300 mL of WAS. The reaction was
78
initiated by adding an aliquot of the persulfate stock solution (PMS or PDS) into the reactor
79
containing WAS. The concentrations of persulfates for the experiments were 0.5, 1, and 2
80
mmol/g VSS of WAS. Upon the addition of persulfate, the reactor was immediately heated
81
with stirring at 700 rpm by a ceramic hot plate stirrer. The reactor was continuously heated
82
until the temperature reached 80°C (for 5 min), and the temperature was controlled constant
83
(± 1.0 ˚C) by intermittent heating during the entire reaction (60 min). The solution pH
84
decreased from 6.8 to 2.0−4.2 depending on the condition as persulfates were decomposed
85
(refer to the supporting information, Figure S1). The WAS samples were withdrawn at
86
predetermined time intervals and immediately immersed into an ice bath to quench further
87
reaction. The samples were cooled for 3 min in the ice bath prior to analysis.14 For some
88
experiments, microwave (MW) heating was used for comparison. The MW irradiation
89
(2.45 GHz) was performed by placing the reactor into a MW chamber equipped with a probe 4
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digital thermometer and a magnetic stirrer. Further details on the MW experiments are
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described in the supporting information (Figures S2−S5).
92 93
All experiments were conducted in duplicate at least, and the average values with the standard deviations are presented.
94 95
Filterability. The filterability of WAS was evaluated by the capillary suction time (CST) as
96
commonly used in the literature.28,29 A commercial capillary suction timer (Type 304B, Triton
97
Ltd., UK) equipped with a stainless steel funnel (1.0-cm inner diameter and 5.0-cm height)
98
and standard CST filter papers was used for the CST measurement. The variations in
99
filterability were represented by the reciprocal ratio of CST to its initial value (CST0/CST). A
100
CST0/CST value higher than unity indicates an increase in filterability.
101 102
EPS Stratification and Analysis. EPS in the WAS was stratified into four fractions (i.e.,
103
soluble EPS, loosely bound EPS (LB-EPS), the first and second tightly bound EPS (TB-EPS-
104
1 and TB-EPS-2)) by the EPS extraction protocol slightly modified from the method
105
described in the literature.30 The WAS samples were centrifuged (2000 g for 15 min), and the
106
supernatants were collected as soluble EPS. The bottom pellets were fully re-suspended to the
107
original volume using a phosphate buffer saline (PBS, pH 7). The suspensions were
108
centrifuged (5000 g for 15 min), and the supernatants were collected as LB-EPS. The bottom
109
pellets were re-suspended using PBS and ultrasonicated at 20 kHz and 480 W for 10 min
110
while maintaining a temperature of 4˚C in an ice bath. The suspensions were centrifuged
111
(20,000 g for 20 min), and the supernatants were collected as TB-EPS-1. The residues were
112
again subject to re-suspension, ultrasonication, and centrifugation under the same conditions 5
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as the last run, and the supernatants were collected as TB-EPS-2. Protein (PN) and
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polysaccharide (PS) (assumed to be dominant components of EPS5,31) were quantified in each
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fraction of the extracted EPS.
116
For the analyses of PN and PS, the EPS samples were filtered by a 0.45 µm PTFE
117
membrane syringe filter, and the filtrates were used. PN was measured by the Lowry method
118
using bovine serum albumin as the standard.32 PS was measured by the phenol-sulfuric acid
119
method using glucose as the standard.33
120 121
Centrifuged Weight Reduction. Centrifuged weight reduction (CWR) was analyzed by
122
measuring the weights of the centrifuged WAS before and after the treatment. To measure the
123
centrifuged weight (CW) of WAS, 30 ml of the WAS sample was centrifuged at 3,000 g for
124
30 min; then, the supernatant was gently discarded, and the remaining sludge sediment was
125
weighed. CWR was calculated using the CW values of the raw and treated WAS samples
126
(equation 1).
127
CWR (%) = [1 − CWtreated /CWraw] × 100
(1)
128 129
Other Analyses. To analyze the dissolved organic carbon (DOC), total dissolved nitrogen
130
(TDN), ammonium ion (NH4+), and persulfates in the WAS samples, the liquid was separated
131
by centrifugation (1308 g, 15 min) and subsequently filtered through a 0.45-µm-pore-size
132
polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membrane syringe filter (HP045AN, Advantec MFS Inc.
133
Japan). DOC and TDN were analyzed using a TOC/TN analyzer (Shimadzu Co., Japan). The
134
concentration of NH4+ was quantified by ion chromatography (ICS-1600, Dionex Co., USA)
135
with a conductivity detector. The separation was performed on a cationic column (4 mm × 6
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250 mm, IonPac CS12A, Dionex Co., USA) using 18 mM methanesulfonic acid as the eluent
137
at a flow rate of 1.0 mL/min. Persulfates were analyzed by iodometry.34
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The sub-micron particle size distribution and the zeta potential of the WAS samples were
139
analyzed by a Zetasizer Nano ZS (Malvern Instruments Ltd., UK). A rotational viscometer
140
(LVDV-I Prime, Brookfield Eng. Labs. Inc., USA) was used to measure the apparent
141
viscosity of the WAS samples and the measurement was performed using spindle (No. 63) at
142
20 rpm. The samples were centrifuged at 300 g for 10 min, and the supernatants were used
143
for the analysis. The total suspended solids (TSS), volatile suspended solids (VSS), water
144
content, and alkalinity were analyzed in accordance with the Standard Methods.35
145 146
RESULTS
147 148
WAS Filterability. The time-dependent variation of the WAS filterability (denoted as
149
CST0/CSTt) was monitored during the thermally activated PMS and PDS treatments (80˚C)
150
with different persulfate doses (Figures 1a and 1b). The control conditions generally
151
decreased the WAS filterability; the persulfate treatment at room temperature (RT, 24±0.5˚C)
152
slightly decreased the CST0/CSTt value over the entire reaction time, and the thermal
153
treatment at 80˚C without persulfate resulted in a rapid decrease in the CST0/CSTt value
154
within 5 min.
155
The PMS treatment activated at 80˚C enhanced the WAS filterability during the initial
156
stage of the reaction (10 min); the CST0/CSTt value increased 2.17, 2.08, and 1.58 times at
157
PMS doses of 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 mmol/g VSS, respectively (Figure 1a), and then after 10 min,
158
the WAS filterability stagnated or began to decrease. The thermally-activated PDS treatment 7
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exhibited different trends from the PMS treatment (Figure 1b). At the beginning of the
160
reaction (within 5 min), the PDS treatment at 80˚C decreased the WAS filterability similar to
161
the thermal treatment without persulfate. However, after 5 min, the WAS filterability began to
162
increase enormously; in 60 min, the CST0/CSTt value increased by 2.39 and 4.31 times at
163
PDS doses of 1.0 and 2.0 mmol/g VSS, respectively. It appeared that 0.5 mmol PDS/g VSS
164
was not sufficient to recover the WAS filterability.
165 166
Decomposition of Persulfates. The decomposition of persulfates was monitored during the
167
WAS treatment (Figures 2a and 2b). The decomposition of PMS at 80˚C proceeded in two
168
stages (Figure 2a). In the first stage of the reaction, a certain amount of PMS was
169
instantaneously decomposed possibly due to the rapid direct reactions of PMS with the WAS
170
constituents. The second stage reaction exhibited a gradual decomposition of PMS following
171
pseudo-first-order kinetics. At RT, the instantaneous decomposition of PMS occurred initially,
172
but no further decomposition followed in the second stage. In contrast with PMS, PDS
173
continuously decomposed during the entire reaction time at 80˚C, exhibiting pseudo-first-
174
order decay. The PDS decomposition at RT was negligible.
175 176
Particle Size Distribution. The particle size distribution of WAS has been examined as an
177
important factor affecting the sludge filterability.8,26,36 Mikkelsen noted that particles in WAS
178
generally exhibits bimodal size distributions in ranges of 0.5–5 µm (primary particles) and
179
25–1,000 µm (macro-flocs), and primary particles have a dominant effect on the WAS
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filterability characterized by CST.29 Shao et al. also reported that solids smaller than 10 µm
181
have the most critical effect on the WAS filterability.37 In this study, therefore, the size
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distribution of (supra- and true-38) colloidal particles in the range of 0.01–10 µm was
183
examined during thermal and thermally activated persulfate treatments (Figures 3a−3c).
184
The particle size distribution of raw WAS exhibited a major peak centered at 5.25 µm.
185
The thermal treatment without persulfate did not significantly change the distribution profile
186
(Figure 3a); the major peak at 5.25 µm slightly increased, and a very minor peak evolved at
187
approximately 1.36 µm. However, the treatments by thermally activated PMS and PDS
188
appeared to fragment the major group of particles in WAS into smaller groups (Figures 3b
189
and 3c). In the PMS treatment at 80˚C (Figure 3b), the peak at 5.25 µm was rapidly reduced
190
with evolving new peaks in the lower particle size range. Those peaks were downshifted as
191
the reaction proceeded; 0.25 and 1.27 µm at 15 min, 0.06, 0.71 µm at 30 min, and 0.06,
192
0.29−0.54 µm at 60 min. The PDS treatment at 80˚C downshifted the major peak at 5.25 µm
193
to those at 5.06 µm (15 min), 3.57 µm (30 min), and 1.86 µm (60 min) (Figure 3c). A very
194
minor peak was also evolved at 0.25 µm (refer to the inset). Compared to the PMS treatment,
195
the fragmentation rate of the major colloidal group (at approximately 5.25 µm) was slower in
196
the PDS treatment. In addition, the PDS treatment did not significantly produce true colloidal
197
particles less than 1 µm.
198 199
Behaviors of EPS. The concentrations of PN and PS in four different fractions of EPS (i.e.,
200
soluble-, LB-, TB-EPS-1 and TB-EPS-2) were monitored over time during the thermal and
201
thermally activated persulfate treatments (Figures 4a−4c for PN and Figures 4d−4f for PS).
202
The thermal treatment at 80˚C without persulfate increased the soluble- and LB-EPS (both
203
PN and PS) with slightly decreasing fractions of TB-EPS-1 and TB-EPS-2 (Figures 4a and
204
4d). 9
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In the PMS treatment activated at 80˚C, the PN content in all fractions of EPS rapidly
206
decreased in the initial 5 min and then gradually increased over the rest of the reaction time;
207
in particular, an increase in soluble- and TB-EPS-2 was evident (Figure 4b). Similarly, the
208
overall PS content exhibited a rapid initial decrease and a subsequent gradual increase
209
(Figure 4e). However, unlike the PN content, the PS content in the soluble EPS continued to
210
increase during the entire reaction time.
211
On the other hand, the treatment by thermally activated PDS continuously decreased both
212
the PN and PS contents in the TB-EPS-1 and TB-EPS-2 while increasing those in the soluble-
213
and LB-EPS (Figure 4c and 4f).
214 215
Dissolved Organics and Ammonium Ion. To examine the solubilization of the WAS
216
constituents, variations in DOC, TDN, and NH4+ were monitored during the thermally
217
activated persulfate treatments (Figures 5a−5d, and Figures S6a and S6b in the supporting
218
information).
219
The thermal treatment without persulfate was effective in the WAS solubilization; DOC
220
increased by 19-fold in 1 h (refer to “No oxidant” in Figures 5a and 5b). The thermally-
221
activated persulfate treatments did not increase DOC as much as the thermal treatment
222
(Figures 5a and 5b), due to the oxidative mineralization of eluted organic substances.39 An
223
increase in persulfate dose accelerates both elution and mineralization of DOC. For the PDS
224
oxidation (Figure 5a), DOC increased with increasing the oxidant dose, indicating that the
225
elution of organics is more pronounced than its mineralization. However, the PMS oxidation
226
exhibited less DOC at higher oxidant doses (Figure 5b), indicating that the mineralization of
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DOC dominates. TDN exhibited very similar trends to DOC in both the PMS and PDS
228
treatments (Figure S6a and S6b).
229
The concentration of NH4+ did not change during the thermal treatment (refer to “No
230
oxidant” in Figures 5c and 5d). However, the treatments by thermally activated persulfates
231
increased the level of NH4+ in solution (Figures 5c and 5d). A greater amount of NH4+
232
accumulated at higher doses of persulfates. The PMS treatment generally eluted more NH4+
233
than the PDS treatment.
234 235
Reduction of VSS and Centrifuged Weight. The VSS reduction by thermal and thermally
236
activated persulfate treatments was examined (Figure 6a). The thermal treatment without
237
persulfate reduced VSS by 2% in 1 h. The PMS treatment at RT reduced VSS by
238
approximately 2.5% in 1 h at all PMS doses. The VSS reduction by the PDS treatment at RT
239
was negligible. The treatments by thermally activated persulfates reduced VSS by 4.9–15.4%
240
for PMS and by 4.1–7.7% for PDS depending on the persulfate dose.
241
The centrifuged weight reduction (CWR) exhibited similar trends to the VSS reduction,
242
with higher overall values and less difference between the PMS and PDS treatments (Figure
243
6b). The CWR by thermal treatment without persulfate was relatively low. The changes in
244
color and volume of the WAS samples during the persulfate treatments were also presented
245
(Figure S7 in the supporting information).
246 247
MW Effects. MW heating was compared with conventional heating to examine any
248
synergistic effects of MW irradiation with persulfate oxidation (i.e., non-thermal effects other
249
than the temperature elevation by MW40). However, notable differences between the two
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heating methods were not found in any of the results regarding WAS filterability, persulfate
251
decomposition, and dissolution of DOC and NH4+. Further details are described in the
252
supporting information (Figures S2−S5).
253 254
DISCUSSION
255 256
Factors Affecting WAS Filterability. In WAS flocs, water is usually entrapped in the
257
interstitial space of the EPS matrix and partially in the intracellular region of microbial cells,
258
or adsorbed on the EPS surfaces. The literature has reported that WAS filterability is affected
259
by multiple factors such as the concentration and properties of EPS, floc size, the surface
260
charge of flocs, and viscosity.24,28-30,37,38,41-43 A high concentration of EPS generally leads to
261
low WAS filterability with different sensitivities depending on the classifications of EPS
262
(soluble, LB-, TB-EPS, and PS, PN, etc.).30,37,41,42 In terms of the floc size, the abundance in
263
supra- and true colloidal particles (smaller than 10 µm) has been reported to decrease WAS
264
filterability.29,37,38 An increased negative surface charge also decreases the filterability by
265
enhancing the dispersivity of WAS suspension (i.e., the increased stability of colloidal
266
particles results in less aggregation and subsequently increases the packing density of
267
flocs).28,29,41 An increase in WAS viscosity generally decreases WAS filterability.24,42,43
268
However, the deterioration of WAS filterability with decreased viscosity has been also
269
reported in some non-oxidative treatments (e.g., thermal, ultrasonic and alkali
270
treatments).44,45 In this study, no clear correlation between viscosity and WAS filterability
271
was found (compare Figure 1 and Figure S9 in the supporting information).
272 12
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Effects of Thermal Treatment on WAS Filterability. The thermal treatment without
274
persulfate deteriorated the WAS filterability (Figure 1), which is consistent with the
275
observations in earlier studies.26,36,46 The release of soluble EPS (Figures 4a and 4d, also
276
evidenced by the increase in DOC and TDN, Figures 5 and S6) appears to be the main cause
277
for the decreasing filterability. The thermal treatment at 80˚C did not significantly cause the
278
fragmentation of major flocs (Figure 3a)26,36,46 or the lysis of cellular proteins in WAS (no
279
production of NH4+, Figures 5c and 5d). Tian et al. reported that the peptide bonds of proteins
280
in WAS start to be cleaved at above 300˚C, eventually leading to the release of NH4+.3 The
281
increase in surface negative charge (Figure S8 in the supporting information) may partially
282
increase the stability of micro-flocs (e.g., a small group of micro-flocs at 1.36 µm was formed,
283
Figure 3a), contributing to the decrease in filterability.
284 285
Reactions of Persulfates with WAS Constituents. Persulfates are strong oxidants with high
286
redox potentials for two-electron transfer reactions (E0(S2O82−/SO42−) = 1.96 VSHE47;
287
E0(HSO5−/SO42−) = 1.75 VSHE48). They can also be converted into reactive radical species
288
such as SO4•− and •OH at elevated temperatures. Both direct (by persulfates) and indirect (by
289
radical species) reactions will oxidatively disintegrate WAS components.
290
As shown in Figures 2a and 2b, the reactions of persulfates with WAS proceeded in
291
different patterns for PMS versus PDS. The instantaneous decomposition of PMS in the
292
initial stage of the reaction (both at RT and 80˚C) implies that specific substrates in WAS
293
rapidly consume PMS via selective direct reactions. PMS has been reported to oxidize
294
various organic compounds (e.g., indole, vanillin and aromatic anils) via non-radical
295
mechanisms such as oxygen transfer and nucleophilic addition.49-51 The decomposition of 13
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residual PMS in the second stage (i.e., the gradual pseudo-first-order decay) proceeded via
297
the thermal decomposition of PMS itself which produces •OH and SO4•− (reaction 2).52 The
298
resultant radical species non-selectively oxidize substrates in WAS.
299
HSO5−
∆
•
OH + SO4•−
(2)
300
In the second stage, the possibility for PMS to directly react with WAS substrates is excluded
301
because the PMS decomposition rate in WAS is identical to that in deionized water (Figure
302
S10a in the supporting information).
303
On the other hand, PDS did not undergo the initial fast decomposition by direct reactions
304
with WAS constituents (Figure 2b). It is well known that PDS is thermally decomposed to
305
produce two equivalents of SO4•− by the symmetrical fission of the peroxide bond (reaction
306
3),53 and it appears that SO4•− is primarily responsible for the oxidative disintegration of WAS
307
components.
308
∆
S2O82−
2SO4•−
(3)
309
A notable observation is that the PDS decomposition is significantly accelerated in the WAS
310
medium compared to in deionized water (Figure S10b in the supporting information),
311
suggesting the possibility of direct reactions of PDS with WAS components (relative slow
312
and steady compared to the reactions of PMS). This behavior can also be explained by the
313
radical chain reactions initiated by the reaction of SO4•−. It has been suggested that the one-
314
electron oxidation of organic substrates by SO4•− produces an organo radical as an
315
intermediate, which converts another PDS molecule into SO4•−, propagating the chain
316
reactions (reactions 4 and 5).54,55
317
RH + SO4•−
→
R• + SO42− + H+
(4)
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S2O82− + R• →
SO4•− + SO42− + R+
(5)
319 320
Effects of Thermally-Activated Persulfate Treatments on WAS Filterability. The
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variations in WAS filterability during thermally-activated persulfate treatments (Figure 1) are
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interpreted by the behaviors of colloidal particles (Figure 3) and EPS (Figure 4).
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The initial enhancement in WAS filterability by the thermally-activated PMS treatment
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(Figure 1a) primarily resulted from the fast decrease of EPS in the first stage of the reaction
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(< 5 min, Figures 4b and 4e). The destruction of EPS leads to the release of interstitial and
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surface-bound water molecules. In particular, the decrease in TB-EPS (rather than soluble and
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LB-EPS) and in PN (rather than PS) was pronounced, which was consistent with the
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observations in previous studies; TB-EPS has been suggested to be a substantial factor
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reciprocally correlated with the WAS filterability in the Fe(II)-catalyzed PDS treatment25
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(however, other studies have reported the importance of soluble- and LB-EPS in raw and
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thermally treated WAS30,37,42,46), and PN is known as a more critical constituent of EPS for
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holding water molecules than PS.30,37,41 In the second stage (after 5 min), the WAS
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filterability began to deteriorate as the overall EPS increased (Figures 4b and 4e); the increase
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in soluble- and TB-EPS-2 was pronounced. The decreased filterability in this stage can also
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be associated with the fragmentation of micro-flocs into fine colloidal particles (Figure 3b).
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Previous studies have demonstrated that the water filterability through the particle cake
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decreases mainly by fine particles smaller than 1 µm by experiments using inorganic particles
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(silicon carbide and alumina) of different sizes.56,57 The reactions of •OH and SO4•− appear to
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be responsible for the intensive fragmentation of micro-flocs.
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On the other hand, in the thermally-activated PDS treatment, the WAS filterability
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slightly decreased in the initial stage of the reaction, but then (after 5 min) it significantly
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increased throughout the entire reaction (Figure 1b). The initial decrease in filterability may
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have resulted from the instant increase in soluble EPS (Figures 4c and 4f) as was in the
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thermal treatment; in the initial stage, the thermal effect appears dominant over the chemical
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oxidation. In the subsequent process, the filterability was substantially improved due to the
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overall decrease in EPS (Figures 4c and 4f); particularly, the decrease in TB-EPS was critical.
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In addition, contrary to the PMS treatment, the PDS treatment did not produce a significant
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faction of true colloidal particles (