Topic
Effluent
About: Effluent is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 32668 publications have been published within this topic receiving 533991 citations.
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TL;DR: Development of a biofilm-MBR has been investigated combining a moving-bed-biofilm reactor with a submerged membrane biomass separation reactor, and sustainable operation was found to correlate to the fate of the submicron particle size fraction throughout the treatment process.
177 citations
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TL;DR: The present study describes the development, validation and a practical application of a fully automated analytical method based on on-line solid-phase extraction-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (SPE-LC-MS/MS) for the simultaneous determination of 19 sulfonamides, including one acetylated metabolite, in different water matrices.
176 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, Bagasse fly ash, a waste generated in sugar industries in India, has been converted into a low cost adsorbent and has been used for the removal of lead from aqueous solutions in the 4.80 A 10.4 to 4.83 A 10â3 M concentration range.
Abstract: Bagasse fly ash, a waste generated in sugar industries in India, has been converted into a low cost adsorbent and has been used for the removal of lead from aqueous solutions in the 4.80 A 10â4 to 4.83 A 10â3 M concentration range. Maximum removal takes place at pH 3.0 using lOgâ1 of the adsorbent of particle size 150–200 mesh. The effect of the presence of other metal ions, temperature, and contact time has also been studied. Sorption data have been correlated with both Langmuir and Freundlich adsorption models. The adsorbent has been satisfactorily.-used for the removal of Pb2+ from the effluent of a metal-finishing plant.
176 citations
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TL;DR: The efficiency of alternative pretreatment methods for an olive mill effluent (OME) in producing a final effluent conforming to Turkish Water Pollution Standards for discharge into the public sewage was studied as mentioned in this paper.
176 citations
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TL;DR: The speciation of EDTA in sewage effluents leaving wastewater treatment plants determines its ultimate fate in natural surface waters, since only the Fe(III)-EDTA complex (FeEDTA) is quickly degraded by direct photolysis, whereas other EDTA species are very slowly transformed by biological or chemical processes as discussed by the authors.
175 citations