Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4483052 Water Research 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The fates of several macrolide, sulphonamide, and trimethoprim antibiotics contained in the raw sewage of the Tel-Aviv wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) were investigated after the sewage was treated using either a full-scale conventional activated sludge (CAS) system coupled with a subsequent ultrafiltration (UF) step or a pilot membrane bioreactor (MBR) system. Antibiotics removal in the MBR system, once it achieved stable operation, was 15–42% higher than that of the CAS system. This advantage was reduced to a maximum of 20% when a UF was added to the CAS. It was hypothesized that the contribution of membrane separation (in both systems) to antibiotics removal was due either to sorption to biomass (rather than improvement in biodegradation) or to enmeshment in the membrane biofilm (since UF membrane pores are significantly larger than the contaminant molecules). Batch experiments with MBR biomass showed a markedly high potential for sorption of the tested antibiotics onto the biomass. Moreover, methanol extraction of MBR biomass released significant amounts of sorbed antibiotics. This finding implies that more attention must be devoted to the management of excess sludge.

► The fates of several antibiotics were tested in two pilot plants: CAS/UF and MBR. ► The MBR demonstrated higher removal efficiency of antibiotics then that of the CAS. ► Addition of UF after CAS had improved the removal efficiency of the antibiotics. ► It is theorized that biofilm formed on UF membrane makes it a tighter separation matrix. ► Batch experiments indicate that sorption to biomass is a significant removal mechanism.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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