Degradation of dye containing in textile wastewater by sequential process: photocatalytic and biological treatment.
José Carlos Mendoza HernándezGabriela PÉrez-OsorioJosé Eligio Moisés Gutiérrez AriasJosefina Castañeda CamachoPublished in: Turkish journal of chemistry (2022)
In this research, a combined photocatalytic and biological treatment is proposed for the elimination of pollutants present in textile wastewater using a natural erionite zeolite (PE) and aluminum oxide (PA) synthesized by the sol-gel method as photocatalysts, and solar radiation. Both catalysts were characterized by XRD, SEM, and EDS. For biological treatment two bacterial consortium were used: BC1 (Escherichia coli N16, Serratia k120, Pseudomonas putida B03 and Enterobacter hormaechei ), and consortium BC2 ( Escherichia coli N16, Serratia Mc107, Enterobacter N9, Enterobacter hormaechei Mc9 ). The photocatalytic and microbiological treatments were carried out initially separately and subsequently in a sequential manner, first the photocatalytic followed by the microbiological to determine if a synergistic effect was achieved. Comparing the photocatalytic performance, erionite showed higher performance of dyes degradation (54.75%) than alumina (28.62%). While in the biological process, BC1 decreased the dye concentration to 56.93% and BC2 to 53.56%. Finally, the best combined process was PA+BC1 reaching pollutants degradation 64.62%, showing that the application of both processes promotes a decolorization in textile wastewater. The water resulting from the combined photocatalysis-microbiological degradation processes was tested for toxicity using Daphnia magna , obtaining that none of the effluents shows toxicity.