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Treatment of olive oil mill wastewater by single electrocoagulation with different electrodes and sequential electrocoagulation/electrochemical Fenton-based processes.

The treatment of olive oil mill wastewater (OOMW) by novel sequential processes involving electrocoagulation (EC) followed by electro-Fenton (EF) or photoelectro-Fenton (PEF) under UVA irradiation has been studied using a boron-doped diamond anode and an air-diffusion cathode for H2 O2 electrogeneration. Their performance was monitored from the removal of total organic carbon (TOC), chemical oxygen demand, turbidity, total solids and total nitrogen, as well as from the energy consumption. Preliminary EC assays were performed with one pair of electrodes made of Al, Fe, AISI 304 or AISI 316L. The Fe/Fe cell showed the best performance, yielding 40% TOC decay in 20 min. Subsequent EF or PEF at natural pH 7.2 performed similarly, whereas PEF became superior at pH 3.0 due to the action of UVA photons. Comparison between EC/PEF and single EF or PEF at pH 3.0 and 25 mA cm-2 with 0.50 mM Fe2+ revealed the positive outcome of the sequential process, attaining 97.1% TOC abatement after 600 min. GC-MS analysis of the raw wastewater allowed identifying 18 cyclic and 27 aliphatic compounds, most of which could not be removed by EC. The final solutions in EC/EF and EC/PEF contained a large plethora of persistent long-chain aliphatic acids and alkanes.

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