Micro-nano bubble ozonation for effective treatment of ibuprofen-laden wastewater and enhanced anaerobic digestion performance

•MNB ozonation removes over 99 % of IBU (∼50 mg/L) in 70 min across a wide pH range.•MNB ozonation lowers IBU wastewater toxicity vs. conventional ozonation.•70 min of MNB ozonation improves methane yield by 48.1 % vs. the untreated group.•MNB ozonation pretreatment positively influenced the sludge...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water research (Oxford) 2025-04, Vol.273, p.123006, Article 123006
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Sining, Qiao, Lei, Jia, Yanyan, Khanal, Samir Kumar, Sun, Lianpeng, Lu, Hui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•MNB ozonation removes over 99 % of IBU (∼50 mg/L) in 70 min across a wide pH range.•MNB ozonation lowers IBU wastewater toxicity vs. conventional ozonation.•70 min of MNB ozonation improves methane yield by 48.1 % vs. the untreated group.•MNB ozonation pretreatment positively influenced the sludge microbial community. The pharmaceutical industry plays a crucial role in driving global economic growth but also poses substantial environmental challenges, particularly in the efficient treatment of production wastewater. This study investigates the efficacy of micro-nano bubble (MNB) ozonation for treating high-strength ibuprofen (IBU)-laden wastewater (49.9 ± 2.3 mg/L) and mitigating its inhibitory effects on the anaerobic digestion (AD) of intralipid (IL)-laden wastewater. Our findings demonstrated that MNB ozonation achieved a 99.0 % removal efficiency of IBU within 70 min, significantly surpassing the 69.8 % efficiency observed with conventional ozonation under optimal conditions. Both conventional and MNB ozonation primarily transformed IBU through oxidation processes, including hydroxylation and the conversion of CH bonds to C = O groups, along with carbon cleavage. However, MNB ozonation markedly reduced the toxicity of IBU-laden wastewater by further transforming toxic by-products, particularly under mildly alkaline conditions (pH 7.2 and 9.0). This reduction in toxicity led to a significant improvement in subsequent AD performance; specifically, a 70-min MNB ozonation pretreatment enhanced methane production by 48.1 %, increased chemical oxygen demand removal by 35.6 %, and reduced fatty acid accumulation compared to the control without pretreatment. Additionally, the effluent from MNB ozonation positively impacted the microbial community, particularly by enriching syntrophic bacteria and methanogens. Overall, these findings offered new insights into the behavior and toxicity of IBU oxidation by-products in both conventional and MNB ozonation processes. Furthermore, this study proposed a novel strategy for the combined treatment of IBU- and IL-laden wastewaters, establishing a robust foundation for advancing MNB ozonation technology in engineered pharmaceutical wastewater treatment. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0043-1354
1879-2448
1879-2448
DOI:10.1016/j.watres.2024.123006