Science Inventory

Wastewater Disinfection with Peracetic Acid (PAA), UV Irradiation and Combined PAA-UV Treatments

Citation:

Garg, A., P. Chari, Y. Shi, AND V. Namboodiri. Wastewater Disinfection with Peracetic Acid (PAA), UV Irradiation and Combined PAA-UV Treatments. In Proceedings, WEFTEC, Chicago,IL, September 30 - October 04, 2017. Water Environment Federation, Alexandria, VA, 3116-3129, (2018).

Impact/Purpose:

Pretreatment of waste water with low concentration(<1.5ppm) of PAA followed by UV treatment can significantly reduce the UV dose and treatment cost. This strategy potentially can be used to significantly lower the disinfection dose of UV irradiation which in turn can save the utility financial resources in the form of reduced energy needs. In addition, it can improve treatment efficiency considerably with reduction in bacterial regrowth. This study will follow a field study to prove the lab and pilot study results in an actual situation. The study report will be useful for all utilities.

Description:

Both UV irradiation and peracetic acid (PAA) are strong and proven disinfection. In this study, we have investigated the potential synergistic effect of combined PAA and UV irradiation treatments for wastewater disinfection. Initial benchtop studies were followed by a side-stream pilot study to investigate the effect of both PAA and UV irradiation individually or together in combination. In the benchtop studies, the final effluent samples were split into three parts. The first part was treated with various doses of PAA ranging from 1.0 to 5 ppm. The second part was exposed to 10 mJ/cm2 dose of UV and the final or third part of effluent was first treated with 1-5 ppm doses of PAA followed by 10 mJ/cm2 of UV irradiation. Benchtop and side-stream pilot studies indicated that pre-treatment of effluent with PAA significantly increased the disinfection efficiency of UV. Without PAA pre-treatment, 10 mJ/cm2 UV dose achieved a 2.0 log reduction in fecal coliform and E. coli in the benchtop studies. Pretreatment with 5 ppm PAA for 5 minute, and 10 mJ/cm2 UV irradiation gave a 3.5 log reduction. Similar pattern was observed in the pilot study in which UV’s disinfection efficiency significantly increased after pretreatment of effluent with low dose of PAA. These data suggest the PAA/UV sequential treatment is more effective than the UV or PAA treatments separately. This strategy potentially can be used to significantly lower the disinfection dose of UV irradiation which in turn can save the utility financial resources in the form of reduced energy needs.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PAPER IN NON-EPA PROCEEDINGS)
Product Published Date:01/01/2017
Record Last Revised:09/19/2019
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 346477