Seawater treatment is increasingly required due to industrial activities that use substantial volumes of seawater in their processes. The shipping industry and the associated management of a ship's ballast water are currently considered a global challenge for the seas. Related to that, the suitability of an Electrochemical Advanced Oxidation Process (EAOP) with Boron Doped Diamond (BDD) electrodes has been assessed on a laboratory scale for the disinfection of seawater. This technology can produce both reactive oxygen species and chlorine species (especially in seawater) that are responsible for inactivation. The EAOP was applied in a continuous-flow regime with real seawater. Natural marine heterotrophic bacteria (MHB) were used as an indicator of disinfection efficiency. A biphasic inactivation kinetic model was fitted on experimental points, achieving 4-Log reductions at 0.019 Ah L. By assessing regrowth after treatment, results suggest that higher bacterial damages result from the EAOP when it is compared to chlorination. Furthermore, several issues lacking fundamental understanding were investigated such as recolonization capacity or bacterial community dynamics. It was concluded that, despite disinfection processes being effective, there is not only a possibility for regrowth after treatment but also a change on bacterial population diversity produced by the treatment. Finally, energy consumption was estimated and indicated that 0.264 kWh·m are needed for 4.8-Log reductions of MHB; otherwise, with 0.035 kWh·m, less disinfection efficiency can be obtained (2.2-Log red). However, with a residual oxidant in the solution, total inactivation can be achieved in three days.
BACKGROUND: Ultraviolet disinfection systems used for treating ballast water have several strict requirements such as short exposure time or high disinfection efficacy. Disinfection can be enhanced by a photocatalytic system triggered by ultraviolet light, leading to a reduction in the exposure time necessary and thus a general improvement in the treatment. The use of laboratory disinfection equipment and data modeling enabled determination of the expected treatment optimization. RESULTS: Photocatalysis enhanced ultraviolet treatment, reducing dose requirements by up to 70%, and was particularly effective on the most resistant organism. Treatment optimization was also observed in saltwater conditions. CONCLUSION: Photocatalytic treatment may speed up ballasting and deballasting processes, since a lower ultraviolet dose is required.
Ultraviolet disinfection is a frequent option for eliminating viable organisms in ballast water to fulfill international and national regulations. The objective of this work is to evaluate the reduction of microalgae able to reproduce after UV irradiation, based on their growth features. A monoculture of microalgae Tisochrysis lutea was irradiated with different ultraviolet doses (UV-C 254 nm) by a flow-through reactor. A replicate of each treated sample was held in the dark for 5 days simulating a treatment during the ballasting; another replicate was incubated directly under the light, corresponding to the treatment application during de-ballasting. Periodic measurements of cell density were taken in order to obtain the corresponding growth curves. Irradiated samples depicted a regrowth following a logistic curve in concordance with the applied UV dose. By modeling these curves, it is possible to obtain the initial concentration of organisms able to reproduce for each applied UV dose, thus obtaining the dose-survival profiles, needed to determine the disinfection kinetics. These dose-survival profiles enable detection of a synergic effect between the ultraviolet irradiation and a subsequent dark period; in this sense, the UV dose applied during the ballasting operation and subsequent dark storage exerts a strong influence on microalgae survival. The proposed methodology, based on growth modeling, established a framework for comparing the UV disinfection by different devices and technologies on target organisms. This procedure may also assist the understanding of the evolution of treated organisms in more complex assemblages such as those that exist in natural ballast water.
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