dc.description.abstract |
The pulp and paper industry is among one of the largest sources, which discharge enormous
quantity of pollutants including gaseous, liquid, and solid waste into the environment. Despite
these, it is also the third largest consumer of fresh water after primary metals and the chemical
industries. Higher consumption of water is one of the key environmental concerns in paper
industry, since it produces a large volume of wastewater as well. The wastewater from paper
industry contains a significant amount of organic matter, with low biodegradability, high color,
AOX and toxicity values. Various wastewater pollutants, including toxic organic compounds at a
high concentration, are difficult to treat with conventional treatment processes. Hence, treatment
technologies require continuous advancements in order to meet the rigorous discharge standards
and to improve the cost effectiveness of the processes. The electrochemical (EC) method is a
treatment process that can be a promise as an effective treatment alternative for high strength
organic wastewater containing toxic substance.
The pulp and paper mill wastewater from primary and secondary clarifier was characterized in
terms of environmental parameters; COD, TOC, BOD, color, solids, Cl- and AOX. The
electrochemical (EC) treatment using stainless steel anode was used to treat the present effluent.
Optimization of the process variables i.e., initial pH of the wastewater, current density (CD),
treatment time (t), and initial organic load, for the treatment of paper mill wastewater by EC was
carried out. This was done in terms of COD and color removal efficiency. The removal efficiency
for other parameters such as BOD, TOC, AOX, and chlorophenols were determined under
optimized conditions. Both primary and secondary clarifier wastewater was subjected to
electrochemical treatment under the optimized conditions. The electrochemical treatment method
was found to be efficient for the color removal. BOD5/COD ratio of the effluents improved after
the treatment to a significant extent. The biodegradability of the effluent improved substantially
after the EC treatment, indicating the easy removal of pollutants by biological process. The
generated sludge was characterised for various physico-chemical parameters.
The results on detection and quantitative determination of various chlorophenols in the
combined pulp and paper mill effluent are reported. The GCMS analysis of both primary and
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secondary clarifier effluents samples leads to the identification of 20 low molecular weight
chlorophenolic compounds in primary clarifier effluent and 18 compounds in the secondary
clarifier wastewater in various concentrations. Six types of chlorophenolics compounds i.e.,
chlorophenols, chloroguaiacols, chlorocatechols, chlorovaillin, chlorosyringols and
chlorosyringaldehyde, were identified in the effluent. The results indicate that, among the total
compounds detected, the higher contribution to the chlorophenols comes from di-substituted
compounds in the paper mill effluent. The effectiveness and performance of the stainless
electrodes for the degradation of chlorophenols is also examined. In case of chlorophenols,
monochlorophenols were oxidized to the maximum extent followed by di- and trichlorophenols.
For chlorophenol treatment, 68.7 % organic removal was achieved after 2h on stainless steel anode
at current density of 15 A/cm2 for primary clarifier effluent and 85.3 % removal was achieved in
secondary clarifier effluent. Analysis with the High Performance Liquid chromatography (HPLC)
revealed many intermediate products during the EC process, from aromatic compounds to aliphatic
acids, which were oxidized by SS electrode. Based on the EC degradation performance and the
HPLC results, the treated samples were also analyzed on GC-MS for the qualitative and
quantitative analysis of the chloro-organic intermediates.
The EC treated secondary clarifier wastewater was used as wash water to study the recycling
of this wastewater in pulping and bleaching sections of paper mill. The pulp was bleached to 84%
ISO target brightness using DEpD bleach sequence in the laboratory. D and EP, refer to chlorine
dioxide and H2O2 reinforced NaOH extraction stages, respectively. For DEpD sequence a Kappa
Factor of 0.28 was found to be optimum for attaining the target brightness (84% ISO). The two
DEpD sequences were done in parallel using fresh water (DEpD) as well as EC treated water
(RC_DEpD) for washing to achieve the target brightness. The two bleaching sequences were
compared in terms of bleach chemical demand, pulp brightness, and change in bleach chemical
dose to get the same target brightness. The generated bleach effluent was characterized for
environmental load. A higher COD and color was generated in RC_DEpD sequence as compared
to DEpD as a higher kappa factor of 0.29 (RC_DEpD) was required to achieve the same target
brightness (84% ISO). There was no effect of wastewater recycling on pulp and paper properties
i.e. viscosity, tear, tensile, and burst indexes. |
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