Abstract
Chemical wastewater often contains large amounts of waste organic carbon. The current chemical wastewater treatment plants are an open carbon emission system. Inspired by the topic of CO2 conversion and utilization, this study provided a redesigned flowchart of chemical wastewater treatment process via closed-loop carbon conversion and utilization system for the resource utilization of waste carbon from wastewater. Purified terephthalic acid (PTA) wastewater, a common chemical wastewater, was selected to test the feasibility of the proposed strategy. An integrated closed-loop system involving activated sludge-microalgae-pyrolysis process was employed. Initially, a laboratory-scale wastewater treatment system combining activated sludge with microalgae process was applied for the carbon conversion and utilization in PTA wastewater. The COD removal efficiency was obtained at 93.02%, and over 94% of CO2 was captured. Microbial DNA analysis of the activated sludge indicated that the functional microorganisms mainly included Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Chloroflexi. Metabolic analysis of the microalgae showed that the abundances of differential metabolites associated with carbon metabolism significantly increased after treatment. Furthermore, a pilot-scale integrated system was applied to test this strategy and in which obtained a good performance in COD removal and CO2 capture. The produced excess biomass during chemical wastewater treatment, which was usually viewed as hazardous solid waste, was converted to biochar and carbonaceous combustible gas via pyrolysis. The produced biochar could be used as photocatalysts to remove antibiotic. The findings provided a new design to simultaneously achieve water pollution control, carbon conversion & utilization, and resource & energy recovery in chemical wastewater treatment process.
Published Version
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