Titanium Nanomaterial Removal and Release from Wastewater Treatment Plants
Arizona State University · Universidad Metropolitana
Abstract
Titanium (Ti) occurs naturally in soils and as highly purified titanium dioxide (Ti5O2) in many commercial products that have been used for decades. We report for the first time the occurrence, characterization, and removal of nano- and larger-sized Ti at wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). At one WWTP studied in detail, raw sewage contained 100 to nearly 3000 microg TVL Ti larger than 0.7 microm accounted for the majority of the Ti in raw sewage, and this fraction was well removed by WWTP processes. Ti concentrations in effluents from this and several other WWTPs ranged from
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 35
Authors
6- MAMehlika A. KiserCorresponding
Arizona State University, Universidad Metropolitana
- PWPaul Westerhoff
Arizona State University, Universidad Metropolitana
- TMTroy M. Benn
Arizona State University, Universidad Metropolitana
- YWY. Wang
Universidad Metropolitana, Arizona State University
- JPJ. Pérez-Rivera
Universidad Metropolitana, Arizona State University
Topics & keywords
- Biosolids
- Effluent
- Sewage treatment
- Wastewater
- Titanium
- Sewage
- Activated sludge
- Sewage sludge
- Clean water and sanitation