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Wastewater

About: Wastewater is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 92512 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1256590 citations. The topic is also known as: waste water.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
20 Aug 2015
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss methods and important results on recovery of nitrogen and phosphorus from wastewater, with an ion exchange/adsorption-based process providing concentrated streams of reactive nitrogen.
Abstract: Use of nitrogen- and phosphorus-based synthetic fertilizers shows an increasing trend, but this has led to large-scale influx of reactive nitrogen in the environment, with serious implications on human health and the environment. On the other hand, phosphorus, a non-renewable resource, faces a serious risk of depletion. Therefore, recovery and reuse of nitrogen and phosphorus is highly desirable. For nitrogen recovery, an ion exchange/adsorption-based process provides concentrated streams of reactive nitrogen. Bioelectrochemical systems efficiently and effectively recover nitrogen as NH3 (g) or (NH4)2SO4. Air stripping of ammonia from anaerobic digestate has been reported to recover 70–92 % of nitrogen. Membrane separation provides recovery in the order of 99–100 % with no secondary pollutant in the permeate.With regard to phosphorus (P) removal, physical filtration and membrane processes have the potential to reduce suspended P to trace amounts but provide minimal dissolved P removal. Chemical precipitation can remove 80–99 % P in wastewater streams and recover it in the form of fertilizer (struvite). Acid hydrolysis can convert recovered P into usable phosphoric acid and phosphate fertilizers. Physical-chemical adsorption and ion exchange media can reduce P to trace or non-detect concentrations, with minimal waste production and high reusability. Biological assimilation through constructed wetlands removes both N (83–87 %) and P (70–85 %) from wastewaters, with recovery in the form of fish/animal feeds and biofuel. The paper discusses methods and important results on recovery of nitrogen and phosphorus from wastewater.

202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A highly selective and sensitive analytical method was developed for simultaneous determination of three classes of commonly used veterinary antibiotics including five sulfonamides, three tetracyclines and one macrolide in swine wastewater using solid-phase extraction (SPE) and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS).

202 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, two basic strategies for reducing water demand in a chemical-process plant were discussed. One strategy consists of modifying individual process and utility units to reduce their inherent need for water.
Abstract: Environmental protection, rising costs for wastewater-treatment, and at many sites a shortage of fresh water are all persuasive motives for reducing raw water consumption and wastewater discharge at a chemical-process plant. Maximizing the re-use of water within the plant can be of great help. Systematic strategies for such maximization can lower freshwater usage and wastewater discharges by 50% or more, while also significantly reducing capital investment in treatment facilities. The typical base case or starting point for such improvements appears in a figure which shows a conventional water network in a process plant. After undergoing initial treatment, the incoming water goes in parallel streams to the various individual process units, as well as to the utility system for steam production and for use in cooling towers. Wastewater streams from the processes, along with blowdown and condensate losses from the utility system, are usually collected together and the combined stream fed to a wastewater treatment facility prior to discharge. There are two basic strategies for reducing water demand in such a plant. One strategy consists of modifying individual process and utility units to reduce their inherent need for water. Examples include replacing water cooling with air cooling, improving controls of boilermore » and cooling-tower blowdowns, and increasing the number of stages in an extraction unit that employs water as its extractant. In the other basic strategy, which is the main focus of this article, the engineer seeks opportunities to use the outlet water from one operation to satisfy the water requirement of another or the same operation. In some cases, the water may require some regeneration prior to re-use. Examples of regeneration include pH adjustment, filtration, membrane separation, sour-water stripping and ion exchange.« less

202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Research regarding the removal of organics with or without hydrothermal flames and the changes in heavy metal speciation and risk are reviewed and typical systems for handling MSS are summarized and research needs and challenges are proposed.

202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study focuses on the removal of 22 selected micropollutants in an effluent from a municipal wastewater treatment plant (MWTP) at pilot scale and chemical removal rates were greater than 80% for the majority of the flow rates tested.

201 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20247
20236,349
202213,022
20214,371
20204,662
20196,129