An Improved Flow-Through Photodegradation Device for the Removal of Emerging Contaminants

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Abstract

Cost-effective procedures usually cannot achieve complete removal of priority contaminants present in water at very low concentrations (as pesticides or pharmaceuticals). Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) represent promising technologies for removing priority contaminants from water at trace concentrations, yet practical implementation remains limited due to technical and economic constraints. This study presents an innovative flow-through photodegradation device designed to overcome current limitations while achieving efficient contaminant removal at industrial scale. The device integrates a UVC 254 nm lamp-equipped flow chamber with automated dosing pumps for hydrogen peroxide and/or solid catalyst suspensions, coupled with a 30 nm porous membrane filtration system for catalyst recirculation. This configuration optimizes light–catalyst–pollutant contact while enabling combined catalytic processes. Performance evaluation using acesulfame (ACE) and iohexol (IHX) as model contaminants demonstrated rapid and effective removal. IHX degradation with UVC and 75 μM H2O2 achieved complete removal with t95% = 7.23 ± 1.21 min (pseudo-order 0.25, t1/2 = 3.27 ± 0.39 min), while ACE photolysis (with UVC only) required t95% = 14.88 ± 2.02 min (pseudo-order 1.27, t1/2 = 2.35 ± 0.84 min). The introduction of t95% as a performance metric provides practical insights for near-complete contaminant removal requirements. Real-world efficacy was confirmed using tertiary wastewater treatment plant effluents containing 14 μg/L IHX, achieving complete removal within 8 min. However, carbamazepine degradation proved slower (t95% > 74 h), highlighting the need for combined catalytic approaches for recalcitrant compounds. Spiking experiments (1000 μg/L) revealed concentration-dependent kinetics and synergistic effects between co-present contaminants. Analysis identified degradation byproducts consistent with previous studies, including tri-deiodinated iohexol (474.17 Da) intermediates. This scalable system, constructed from commercially available components, demonstrates potential for cost-effective industrial implementation. The modular design allows adaptation to various contaminants through adjustable AOP combinations (UV/H2O2, photocatalysts, ozone), representing a practical advancement toward addressing the gap between laboratory-scale photocatalytic research and full-scale water treatment applications.

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