Abstract
1,4-Dioxane is one of the by-products from the polyester manufacturing process, which has been carelessly discharged into water bodies and is a weak human carcinogen. In this study, a laboratory-scale, up-flow biological aerated filter (UBAF), packed with tire chips, was investigated for the treatment of 1,4-dioxane. The UBAF was fed with effluent, containing an average of 31 mg/L of 1,4-dioxane, discharged from an anaerobic treatment unit at H Co. in the Gumi Industrial Complex, South Korea. In the batch, a maximum of 99.5 % 1,4-dioxane was removed from an influent containing 25.6 mg/L. In the continuous mode, the optimal empty bed contact time (EBCT) and air to liquid flow rate (A:L) were 8.5 hours and 30:1, respectively. It was also found that the removal efficiency of 1,4-dioxane increased with increasing loading rate within the range 0.04 to 0.31 kg 1,4-dioxane/m3·day. However, as the COD:1,4-dioxane ratio was increased within the range 3 to 46 (mg/L COD)/(mg/L 1,4-dioxane), the removal efficiency unexpectedly decreased.
Acknowledgments
This study was financially supported by the Korean Ministry of the Environment as part of the “Human resource development Project for Waste to Energy.” and the Korea Institute of Environmental Science and Technology.