Detoxification of olive mill wastewaters by zinc-aluminium layered double hydroxides
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2011
abstract:
Disposal of olive mill waste waters (OMWW) represents a serious problem due to its elevated toxicity and
pollution risk for environmental and aquatic bodies, which is mainly related to its polyphenol content. The use
of layered double hydroxides (LDHs) or anionic clays for OMWW detoxification may represent an effective
remediation process. In the current study, OMWW was treated with cold methanol to obtain a dark humic
acid-like precipitate made of high molecular weight organic compounds named polymerin and a supernatant
made of low molecular weight organics named OMWW-S. After precipitation with methanol, phenol content
decreased from 2.14 g L-1 to 0.80 and 1.20 g L-1, in polymerin and OMWW-S, respectively. The chemical
oxygen demand of OMWW-S decreased by about 30% with respect to raw OMWW, from 62.2 to 40.2 g L-1. A
phenolic concentrate, named OMWW-E was also obtained by ethyl acetate extraction of OMWW-S at pH 2.0.
LDHs of zinc and aluminium (LDH) were obtained at room temperature and after calcination at 450 °C (LDH-
450). An organo-mineral complex of LDH with polymerin (LDH-Pol) was also synthesised. Phenols from
OMWW-E were sorbed preferentially on three matrices according to the following order: LDH-
450NLDHNLDH-Pol, with percent sorption of up to 73% for LDH-450. Repeated cycles of sorption of
OMWW-S onto LDH-450 decreased phenol concentration by about 90%. Use of remediated water in a
phytotoxicity bioassay revealed scant inhibition of germination and coleoptile elongation rate in tomato seeds
and seedlings. Thus, OMWW-S after sorption onto LDH-450 could represent a low cost source of irrigation
water for arid soil of the Mediterranean region.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Olive mill wastewaters; Phenols; Phytoassay; Polymerin; Sorption
List of contributors:
Vinale, Francesco
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