scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Effluent

About: Effluent is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 32668 publications have been published within this topic receiving 533991 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigations lead to the conclusion that low effluent concentrations can be achieved in WWTPs operating SRTs higher than 10 days, which corresponds to the requirements forWWTPs situated in sensitive areas according to the urban wastewater directive of the European Community in moderate climatic zones.

743 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Titanium (Ti) occurs naturally in soils and as highly purified titanium dioxide (Ti5O2) in many commercial products that have been used for decades and is monitored in environment where WWTP liquid effluent is discharged or biomass disposed to increase knowledge on the fate and transport of other nanomaterials in the environment.
Abstract: Titanium (Ti) occurs naturally in soils and as highly purified titanium dioxide (Ti5O2) in many commercial products that have been used for decades. We report for the first time the occurrence, characterization, and removal of nano- and larger-sized Ti at wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). At one WWTP studied in detail, raw sewage contained 100 to nearly 3000 microg TVL Ti larger than 0.7 microm accounted for the majority of the Ti in raw sewage, and this fraction was well removed by WWTP processes. Ti concentrations in effluents from this and several other WWTPs ranged from <5 to 15 microg/L and were nearly all present in the < 0.7 microm size fraction. As Ti was removed, it accumulated in settled solids at concentrations ranging from 1 to 6 microg Ti/mg. Ti-containing solids were imaged in sewage, biosolids, and liquid effluent as well as in commercial products containing engineered TiO2. Single nanoparticles plus spherical aggregates (50 nm to a few hundred nanometer in size) composed of sub-50 nm spheres of Ti and oxygen only (presumably TiO2) were observed in all samples. Significantly larger silicate particles containing a mixture of Ti and other metal atoms were also observed in the samples. To support the field work, laboratory adsorption batch and sequencing batch reactor experiments using TiO2 and activated sludge bacteria verified that adsorption of TiO2 onto activated sludge biomass occurs. Monitoring for TiO2 in the environment where WWTP liquid effluent is discharged (rivers, lakes, oceans) or biomass disposed (landfills, agriculture and soil amendments, incinerator off-gas or residuals) will increase our knowledge on the fate and transport of other nanomaterials in the environment

742 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the environmental fate of active pharmaceutical ingredients in a major production area for the global bulk drug market, where water samples were taken from a common effluent treatment plant near Hyderabad, India, which receives process water from approximately 90 bulk drug manufacturers.
Abstract: Low levels of pharmaceuticals are detected in surface, ground, and drinking water worldwide. Usage and incorrect disposal have been considered the major environmental sources of these microcontaminants. Recent publications, however, suggest that wastewater from drug production can potentially be a source of much higher concentrations in certain locations. The present study investigated the environmental fate of active pharmaceutical ingredients in a major production area for the global bulk drug market. Water samples were taken from a common effluent treatment plant near Hyderabad, India, which receives process water from approximately 90 bulk drug manufacturers. Surface water was analyzed from the recipient stream and from two lakes that are not contaminated by the treatment plant. Water samples were also taken from wells in six nearby villages. The samples were analyzed for the presence of 12 pharmaceuticals with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. All wells were determined to be contaminated with drugs. Ciprofloxacin, enoxacin, cetirizine, terbinafine, and citalopram were detected at more than 1 microg/L in several wells. Very high concentrations of ciprofloxacin (14 mg/L) and cetirizine (2.1 mg/L) were found in the effluent of the treatment plant, together with high concentrations of seven additional pharmaceuticals. Very high concentrations of ciprofloxacin (up to 6.5 mg/L), cetirizine (up to 1.2 mg/L), norfloxacin (up to 0.52 mg/L), and enoxacin (up to 0.16 mg/L) were also detected in the two lakes, which clearly shows that the investigated area has additional environmental sources of insufficiently treated industrial waste. Thus, insufficient wastewater management in one of the world's largest centers for bulk drug production leads to unprecedented drug contamination of surface, ground, and drinking water. This raises serious concerns regarding the development of antibiotic resistance, and it creates a major challenge for producers and regulatory agencies to improve the situation.

741 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Significant differences were observed in concentrations of ARGs (except tetW and tetO) and ARB between the advanced biosolid treatment methods and the conventional dewatering and gravity thickening methods.

729 citations

Book
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the latest views on health risks, environmental hazards and crop production potential associated with the use of treated waste water for irrigation and agriculture in seven countries under different conditions.
Abstract: This publication provides a guide for the use of treated effluent for irrigation and agriculture. It presents the latest views on health risks, environmental hazards and crop production potential associated with the use of treated waste water. It explains the basis for conventional waste water treatment processes and introduces natural biological treatment systems as viable alternatives in developing countries, particularly in hot climates. An important chapter concentrates on waste water irrigation and with water quality requirements for optimum crop production and potential impacts on soils and crops. Economic, institutional and policy issues of waste water use in agriculture are briefly discussed. Finally, waste water use experience in seven countries under different conditions is reviewed and contrasted, including the USA, Jordan, Kuwait, Tunisia, Mexico, and India

724 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Wastewater
92.5K papers, 1.2M citations
97% related
Water quality
67.1K papers, 945.1K citations
92% related
Sorption
45.8K papers, 1.3M citations
85% related
Organic matter
45.5K papers, 1.6M citations
85% related
Groundwater
59.3K papers, 1M citations
84% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20232,088
20224,801
20211,219
20201,341
20191,528
20181,582