Reducing Tannery Wastewater Pollutants through a Magnetic-Field and Ozone-Treatment Electrocoagulation System using Response Surface Methodology
Resumen
This study assesses the effectiveness of integrating electrocoagulation, magnetic fields, and ozonation technologies to remove chemical oxygen demand (COD) and total suspended solids (TSS) from tannery wastewater. Furthermore, the effects of their key operating factors are determined. To achieve this, an electrocoagulation reactor coupled with a magnetic-field generator was used and the response surface methodology was applied through a Box-Behnken experimental design. Here, current intensity (I), treatment time (T), and ozone concentration (O3) are considered influencing factors. Likewise, the removal percentages of COD and TSS serve as response indicators. The results indicate that T, I, and O3 are significant for the removal of COD and TSS at a confidence level of p-value < 0.05. For COD, the optimal operating conditions are I = 6.8 A, T = 30 min, and O3 = 10 mg/l; and for TSS, the optimal conditions are I = 5.72 A, T = 28 min, and O3 = 7.8 mg/l. These conditions yield removal efficiencies of 41.8% for COD and 97.9% for TSS. The findings suggest that integrating these technologies is a viable alternative for mitigating pollution issues caused by the tannery industry.
Cómo citar
Aguilar Ascon, E., Saldaña Marrufo, L., & Neyra Ascón, W. (2024). Reducing Tannery Wastewater Pollutants through a Magnetic-Field and Ozone-Treatment Electrocoagulation System using Response Surface Methodology. Journal of Ecological Engineering, 25(1), 74-83. https://doi.org/10.12911/22998993/173566Editor
Polskie Towarzystwo Inzynierii Ekologicznej (PTIE)Categoría / Subcategoría
PendienteTemas
Revista
Journal of Ecological EngineeringISSN
2299-8993Coleccion(es)
- Estudios Generales [122]