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Photocatalytic Mineralization of Emerging Organic Contaminants Using Real and Simulated Effluents in Batch and Membrane Photoreactors

Catalysts 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 43 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Angela Severino, Cristina Lavorato, Angela Severino, Angela Severino, Raffaele Molinari, Raffaele Molinari, Raffaele Molinari, Beatrice Russo, Teresa Poerio, Teresa Poerio, Teresa Poerio, Teresa Poerio, Teresa Poerio, Angela Severino, Alberto Figoli Beatrice Russo, Beatrice Russo, Beatrice Russo, Angela Severino, Cristina Lavorato, Angela Severino, Cristina Lavorato, Cristina Lavorato, Pietro Argurio, Angela Severino, Cristina Lavorato, Angela Severino, Angela Severino, Pietro Argurio, Pietro Argurio, Pietro Argurio, Angela Severino, Teresa Poerio, Angela Severino, Cristina Lavorato, Cristina Lavorato, Angela Severino, Pietro Argurio, Pietro Argurio, Raffaele Molinari, Beatrice Russo, Beatrice Russo, Cristina Lavorato, Beatrice Russo, Raffaele Molinari, Alberto Figoli Raffaele Molinari, Cristina Lavorato, Cristina Lavorato, Pietro Argurio, Raffaele Molinari, Alberto Figoli Pietro Argurio, Alberto Figoli Raffaele Molinari, Alberto Figoli Teresa Poerio, Teresa Poerio, Alberto Figoli Teresa Poerio, Alberto Figoli Alberto Figoli

Summary

A photocatalytic membrane reactor was tested for removing emerging organic contaminants and plastic-derived compounds from real wastewater treatment plant effluents, showing high degradation efficiency. The approach offers a promising advanced treatment step that existing wastewater plants lack for tackling persistent pollutants.

Study Type Environmental

Conventional wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) have limited efficiency in removing emerging pollutants (EPs), meaning these pollutants persist and lead to widespread ecological contamination. In this study, real effluents from a WWTP were characterized using TOC and Py-GC/MS, which indicated the presence of various organic compounds that could be indicative of micro-nanoplastics (MNPs) or plastics additives. To address this challenge, we propose the use of a photocatalytic membrane reactor (PMR) as an advanced treatment system capable of achieving high degradation efficiency under mild operating conditions. Preliminary experimental tests were conducted using various commercial photocatalysts (TiO2, WO3, Nb2O5), four UV lamps, and oxidants (air, O2) using added Gemfibrozil (GEM) as a drug model compound. Real effluent samples collected from WWTP were tested with and without pretreatment to remove coarse particles prior to photocatalysis. Mineralization was achieved in both cases, but it occurred at a higher rate for the pretreated effluent. The mineralization of GEM and EPs in real effluent was achieved within five hours under UV irradiation using titanium dioxide (TiO2) as a low-cost photocatalyst in a PMR. The results highlight the potential of photocatalytic systems, and particularly PMRs, as a promising technology for removing recalcitrant pollutants in real effluents offering a viable solution for improved environmental protection.

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