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Book ChapterDOI

Sunlight-assisted photo-fenton process for removal of insecticide from agricultural wastewater

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed a new approach for the treatment of pesticide-contaminated waters, which is based on a phase transfer of the pollutant, and showed that the phase transfer is either of high cost or a source of secondary pollution due to sludge formation: therefore, there is a need to seek better alternatives.
Abstract
Pesticides and insecticides are harmful and toxic organic chemicals that are used for controlling pests and insects in agriculture, thereby considered as necessary evil. Agricultural wastewater, contaminated with such toxic pesticides, pollutes surface and groundwater. Pesticides are able to reach surface waters either directly or indirectly via the discharge of agricultural drainage water from treated land and via runoff after application on hard surfaces (Leu et al. 2004). Organophosphorus pesticides are produced in mass and are widely used in the developing country. 2,2 dichlorovinyl dimethyl phosphate, commonly referred as Dichlorvos (Fig. 2.1) is an organophosphorous insecticide, which is highly toxic, non-biodegradable and difficult to remove by conventional methods. During 2006–2010 period, consumption of Dichlorvos in India was 5833 metric tons. Due to its fairly good solubility [~10 g.L−1 (at 20 °C)] in water (WHO 1978, 1994) it is highly mobile in aquatic environment. Various technologies and processes have been proposed for the treatment of pesticide-contaminated waters. Some conventional techniques including flocculation, filtration and adsorption of activated carbon are only based on a phase transfer of the pollutant. These treatment procedures are either of high cost or a source of secondary pollution due to sludge formation: therefore, there is a need to seek better alternatives (Evgenidou et al. 2005). Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) are attractive methods for the treatment of wastewaters containing refractory organics due to their efficiency to oxidize a great variety of organic contaminants by the generation of highly reactive hydroxyl radicals (OH•) (Espulgas et al. 2002). Many pollutants, including pesticides, pharmaceuticals and dyes can be completely mineralised by AOP as reported in the works of Chiron et al. (2000), Perez-Estrada et al. (2005) and Lucas and Peres (2006). Heterogeneous photocatalysis using titanium dioxide (TiO2) and solar/UV radiation, combined with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and homogeneous processes such as Fenton (Fe2+/H2O2) and photo-Fenton (Fe2+/H2O2/UV/sunlight) reactions are proved to be useful techniques for the treatment of pesticide-contaminated wastewater. There are different ways to produce HO•, among which solar photo-Fenton process is one of the most efficient ones for the treatment of contaminated wastewater (Malato et al. 2002; Oller et al. 2006; Maldonado et al. 2007; Ortega-Liebana et al. 2012; Klamerth et al. 2013).

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A critical review on graphene oxide nanostructured material: Properties, Synthesis, characterization and application in water and wastewater treatment

TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the properties, preparation methods and characterization techniques for graphene oxide (GO) nanostructured materials and provided insight into future perspectives and improvements especially the scaling up of graphene oxide based nanocomposites based technology for industrial wastewater treatment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Methomyl degradation in aqueous solutions by Fenton's reagent and the photo-Fenton system

TL;DR: In this article, the chemical degradation of pesticide methomyl in water by Fenton (H 2 O 2 /Fe 2+ ) and photo-Fenton processes was investigated and a laboratory set-up was designed to evaluate and select the optimal oxidation process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solar photocatalytic degradation of some hazardous water-soluble pesticides at pilot-plant scale.

TL;DR: The technical feasibility and performance of photocatalytic degradation of six water-soluble pesticides have been studied at pilot-plant scale in two well-defined systems which are of special interest: heterogeneous photocatalysis with titanium dioxide and homogeneous photoc atalysis by photo-Fenton.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simultaneous assessment of sources, processes, and factors influencing herbicide losses to surface waters in a small agricultural catchment.

TL;DR: The results of a comprehensive field study are presented, in which the temporal and spatial variability of the losses of three herbicides into the surface waters within a small catchment were investigated on different scales after a controlled application of the compounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photocatalytic degradation of EU priority substances : A comparison between TiO2 and Fenton plus photo-Fenton in a solar pilot plant

TL;DR: Titanium dioxide photocatalysis (200 mg/L) and photo-Fenton were applied to the treatment of several different pesticides considered priority substances (PS) by the European Commission dissolved in water at 50mg/L or at maximum water solubility (alachlor, atrazine, chlorfenvinphos, diuron, isoproturon and pentachlorophenol) as a mixture as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study of the removal of dichlorvos and dimethoate in a titanium dioxide mediated photocatalytic process through the examination of intermediates and the reaction mechanism

TL;DR: The results demonstrated that some of the transient intermediates formed, were more toxic compared to parent compounds whereas most of them are less toxic than the parent compounds.
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