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Derin Orhon

Researcher at Near East University

Publications -  373
Citations -  9841

Derin Orhon is an academic researcher from Near East University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Activated sludge & Wastewater. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 365 publications receiving 8924 citations. Previous affiliations of Derin Orhon include TÜBİTAK Marmara Research Center & Istanbul Technical University.

Papers
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Chemical and biological treatment technologies for leather tannery chemicals and wastewaters: a review.

TL;DR: This paper, as the-state-of-the-art, attempts to revise the over world trends of treatment technologies and advances for pollution prevention from tannery chemicals and wastewater to apply the best prevention solution for the future tanneries.
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Modelling of activated sludge systems

Derin Orhon, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the evolution of Activated Sludge Modelling (ASM) has been studied in the context of biological treatmentability, including biological Oxidation of Nitrogen, Biological Nitrogen Removal, Biological Excess Phosphorus Removal and Experimental Assessment of Biological Treatability.
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Color removal from textile wastewaters

TL;DR: In this article, a literature review is made to assess the information on color removal and need for systematic evaluation of the results is emphasized, and results of the study are evaluated and discussed within the context of a systematic approach.
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Chronic impact of tetracycline on the biodegradation of an organic substrate mixture under anaerobic conditions.

TL;DR: The adverse long-term impact of the antibiotic tetracycline was quite variable for fermenting heterotrophic and methanogenic fractions of the microbial community based on changes inflicted on the composition of remaining/residual organic substrate.
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Size distribution of wastewater COD fractions as an index for biodegradability.

TL;DR: Direct particle size measurement by sequential filtration and ultrafiltration as a convenient method for wastewater characterization for appropriate treatment technology and the correlation between particle size distribution (PSD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD) fractionation, as an index for biological treatability are proposed.