Possible nutrient limitations in single (activated sewage sludge) and dual (sludge plus phenol) co-disposals with refuse were examined with the objective of maintaining the fermentation balance and thus minimizing detrimental effects on leachate quality and, subsequent, environmental impacts. Labora
Phenol and refuse catabolism: The effects of different co-disposal strategies
β Scribed by Richard A. Daneel; Eric Senior
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 240 KB
- Volume
- 73
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0268-2575
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The efficacies of di β erent co-disposal strategies (elution, leachate recycle, single addition (batch), single addition plus rain permeation) to treat phenol (1000 and 2000 mg dm~3) were investigated with laboratory microcosms. The elution columns recorded the highest total removals but were coincident with low leachate pH values and high residual phenol concentrations. In contrast, leachate recycle facilitated both increased leachate pH values and methane evolution. Rain permeation proved detrimental to phenol attenuation since the molecule was rapidly displaced together with key methanogenic precursors. All the microcosms were characterised by protracted lag phases prior to phenol catabolism and the nitrate-and sulphate-reducing bacteria were particularly sensitive to the added molecule.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The effect of calcination temperature on the photocatalytic degradation of phenol with aqueous suspensions of synthetic anatase and rutile TiO~2~ under UV light irradiation (__Ξ»__ > 320 nm), was studied in the absence and presence of NaF. The presence of fluoride accelerates the degrada