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Potential effects of rainwater-borne hydrogen peroxide on pollutants in stagnant water environments

journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-01, 00:00 authored by J Qin, Chu Xia LinChu Xia Lin, P Cheruiyot, S Mkpanam, N Good-Mary Duma
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Microcosm experiments were conducted to examine the effects of rainwater-borne H2O2on inactivation of water-borne coliforms, oxidation of ammonia and nitrite, and degradation of organic pollutants in canal and urban lake water. The results show that the soluble iron in the investigated water samples was sufficiently effective for reaction with H2O2in the simulated rainwater-affected stagnant water to produce [rad]OH (Fenton reaction), which inactivated coliform bacteria even at a H2O2dose as low as 5 μM within just 1 min of contact time. Coliform inhibition could last for at least 1 h and repeated input of H2O2at a 30 min interval allowed maintenance of microbial inhibition for at least 3 h. Nitrification was also impeded by the Fenton process. The resulting inhibition of ammonia-oxidizing microbes reduced the removal rate of NH4+and the emission of gaseous N species. In the presence of H2O2at a dose of 20 μM, Fenton-driven chemical oxidation appeared to outplay the impediment of biodegradation caused by inhibited microbial activities in terms of removing total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from the water column. The findings point to a potential research direction that may help to explain the dynamics of water-borne pollutants in ambient water environments.

History

Journal

Chemosphere

Volume

174

Pagination

90-97

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0045-6535

eISSN

1879-1298

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Elsevier

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