Abstract

Abstract This study investigated an underwater plasma water treatment system based on a porous hydrophobic hollow ceramic tube and an alternating current (AC) voltage source, and its application to the decomposition of taste-and-odor compounds originated from algae. The taste-and-odor compounds investigated were geosmin and 2-methyl isoborneol (2-MIB), and the decomposition of algae was carried out on cyanobacteria. The features of the present atmospheric-pressure plasma system employing a porous ceramic tube are large gas–liquid interfacial area due to the formation of numerous plasmatic gas bubbles and instant transfer of short-lived reactive species to water through the micro-pores of the ceramic tube right after the generation. The present plasma process was found to effectively decompose not only the taste-and-odor compounds but also the cyanobacteria algae. Both geosmin and 2-MIB were decomposed more rapidly in the raw river water than in the distilled water. The intermediate products resulting from the decomposition of the taste-and-odor compounds were identified, which showed that geosmin and 2-MIB underwent ring opening and subsequent bond cleavage at multiple sites. The specific energy inputs (SEIs) for 90% decomposition of algae ranged from 3.4 to 8.4 kJ L−1 for the initial concentration range of 129–1596 μg L−1. The decomposition efficiencies of the taste-and-odor compounds were well correlated with the SEI.

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