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Trace organic contaminants in biosolids: impact of conventional wastewater and sludge processing technologies and emerging alternatives

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posted on 2024-11-15, 09:36 authored by Galilee U Semblante, Faisal HaiFaisal Hai, Xia Huang, Andrew S Ball, William PriceWilliam Price, Long Nghiem
This paper critically reviews the fate of trace organic contaminants (TrOCs) in biosolids, with emphasis on identifying operation conditions that impact the accumulation of TrOCs in sludge during conventional wastewater and sludge treatment and assessing the technologies available for TrOC removal from biosolids. The fate of TrOCs during sludge thickening, stabilisation (e.g. aerobic digestion, anaerobic digestion, alkaline stabilisation, and composting), conditioning, and dewatering is elucidated. Operation pH, sludge retention time (SRT), and temperature have significant impact on the sorption and biodegradation of TrOCs in activated sludge that ends up in the sludge treatment line. Anaerobic digestion may exacerbate the estrogenicity of sludge due to bioconversion to more potent metabolites. Application of advanced oxidation or thermal pre-treatment may minimise TrOCs in biosolids by increasing the bioavailability of TrOCs, converting TrOCs into more biodegradable products, or inducing complete mineralisation of TrOCs. Treatment of sludge by bioaugmentation using various bacteria, yeast, or fungus has the potential to reduce TrOC levels in biosolids.

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Citation

Semblante, G. U., Hai, F. I., Huang, X., Ball, A. s., Price, W. E. & Nghiem, L. D. (2015). Trace organic contaminants in biosolids: impact of conventional wastewater and sludge processing technologies and emerging alternatives. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 300 1-17.

Journal title

Journal of Hazardous Materials

Volume

300

Pagination

1-17

Language

English

RIS ID

101826

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