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Stuart J. Khan

Researcher at University of New South Wales

Publications -  213
Citations -  10548

Stuart J. Khan is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Membrane & Nanofiltration. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 201 publications receiving 8654 citations. Previous affiliations of Stuart J. Khan include University of Wollongong & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Papers
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Fluorescence as a potential monitoring tool for recycled water systems: a review.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the sensitive detection of contamination events in recycled water systems may be achieved by monitoring Peak T and/or Peak C fluorescence.
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Fate of antibiotics during municipal water recycling treatment processes

TL;DR: The effectiveness of a range of processes including tertiary media filtration, ozonation, chlorination, UV irradiation, activated carbon adsorption, and NF/RO filTration has been reviewed and semi-quantitative estimations of antibiotics removals have been provided.
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Organic Matter Fluorescence in Municipal Water Recycling Schemes: Toward a Unified PARAFAC Model

TL;DR: While the multimodel comparisons provide a compelling demonstration of PARAFAC's ability to distill chemical information from EEMs, deficiencies identified through this process have broad implications for interpreting and reusing (D)OM-PARAFAC models.
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Removal of trace organics by MBR treatment: the role of molecular properties

TL;DR: High removal efficiencies were observed with most compounds bearing electron donating functional groups such as hydroxyl and primary amine groups, whereas all hydrophilic and moderately hydrophobic compounds showed removal efficiency of less than 20%.
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The role of membrane processes in municipal wastewater reclamation and reuse

TL;DR: An overview of the status of membrane processes in wastewater reclamation and reuse world-wide and depict their potential role in promoting more sustainable water use patterns is provided in this paper, where two types of systems have been built, a centralised type of treatment with dual membrane processes, including microfiltration (MF) and reverse osmosis (RO), and small scale systems using membrane bioreactors.