Abstract
LED spectrophotometry is a robust technique for the indirect characterization of wastewater pollutant load through correlation modeling. To tackle this issue, a dataset with 1300 samples was collected, from both raw and treated wastewater from 45 wastewater treatment plants in Spain and Chile collected over 4 years. The type of regressor, scaling, and dimensionality reduction technique and nature of the data play crucial roles in the performance of the processing pipeline. Eighty-four pipelines were tested through exhaustive experimentation resulting from the combination of 7 regression techniques, 3 scaling methods, and 4 possible dimensional reductions. Those combinations were tested on the prediction of chemical oxygen demand (COD) and total suspended solids (TSS). Each pipeline underwent a tenfold cross-validation on 15 sub-datasets derived from the original dataset, accounting for variations in plants and wastewater types. The results point to the normalization of the data followed by a conversion through the PCA to finally apply a Random Forest Regressor as the combination which stood out These results highlight the importance of modeling strategies in wastewater management using techniques such as LED spectrophotometry.
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