Influence of water depth and season on the photodegradation of micropollutants in a free-water surface constructed wetland receiving treated wastewater
Influence de la profondeur de l'eau et de la saison sur la photodégradation des micropolluants dans une zone de rejet végétalisée de type bassin recevant des effluents traités
Résumé
Micropollutants such as pharmaceutical products and pesticides are still present in treated wastewater. Several of these compounds are photoactive, either by direct or indirect photodegradation. An innovative on-site experimental protocol was designed to investigate the contribution of photodegradation pro-cesses to eliminate micropolluants in constructed wetland (CW). The solar photodegradation of 23 organic micropollutants was studied usingin situ photoreactors at different depths. A CW-photodegradation model was designed and calibrated to further scrutinize the contribution of direct and indirect photodegradation processes in the elimination of micropollutants.The results show that photodegradation is most effective in the first 10 cm of the water column. A classification of micropollutants in 3 groups was developed to characterize their photodegradation. A significant increase of the half-life by direct photodegradation was observed in winter compared to summer due to a lower light intensity in winter. On the opposite, for direct + indirect photodegradation, no significant difference was observed between seasons. The decrease in light intensity in winter wascompensated by higher nitrates concentration which promoted the formation of hydroxyl radicals andincreased indirect photodegradation.The CW-photodegradation model successfully simulated the measured concentrations for direct and indirect photodegradation for 23 micropolluants. Nonetheless, it overestimated the indirect photo-degradation with hydroxyl radicals when using default parameter values derived for surface waters. Hence, the consumption of hydroxyl radicals was increased by a factor of 20 for treated water. This model highlighted the predominance of direct photodegradation in the elimination of all micropollutants, except sotalol for the winter campaign.