The impact of radicals on physicochemical properties of waste activated sludge during hydrodynamic cavitation treatment.

水力空化处理过程中自由基对废弃活性污泥物理化学性质的影响

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作者:Blagojevič Marko, Zupanc Mojca, GostiÅ¡a Jurij, Stres Blaž, Å mid Alenka, Dular Matevž, Slemenik PerÅ¡e Lidija, GradiÅ¡ar Centa UrÅ¡ka, Bizjan Benjamin, Rak GaÅ¡per, Novak UroÅ¡, Likozar Blaž, Kolbl Repinc Sabina
In this study, laboratory-scale Pinned Disc Rotary Generator of Hydrodynamic Cavitation was used to treat waste-activated sludge with a Total Solids concentration of 0.7 %. Five different rotor-stator arrangements were tested, focusing on waste-activated sludge physicochemical and rheological parameters of industrial relevance: general chemical analysis, rheometry, dewaterability, interfacial tension, UV-Vis and FTIR spectroscopy. Radical formation in all five arrangements was confirmed using salicylic acid dosimetry before sample testing. Three of the arrangements generated twice the radical concentration of the other two and achieved a disintegration degree three times higher (17 % compared to 5 %). Capillary Suction Time tests demonstrated a 14-fold reduction in filterability across all arrangements, accompanied by an increase in interfacial tension exceeding 10 %. Statistically significant changes in the UV-Vis spectra indicated alterations in dissolved organic matter humification, aromaticity, and molecular size of colorimetric dissolved organic matter, DNA, and RNA. FTIR analysis revealed characteristic peaks at 1537 cm(-1) and 1648 cm(-1), signifying microbial cell wall damage. Rheological analysis showed a reduction in apparent viscosity within the low shear stress zone (τ < 5 Pa) and a shift in the yield stress point to lower shear stresses (τ < 0.14 Pa compared to τ = 0.17 Pa for the untreated samples). Pearson's correlation test revealed strong, statistically significant correlations between cell wall damage (as identified by FTIR) and hydrodynamic conditions in the reactor, while the correlation with radical formation was not statistically significant. This suggests that hydrodynamic forces were the primary drivers of cell wall damage, with potential synergetic effects from radicals.

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