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<Articles><Article><Journal><PublisherName></PublisherName><JournalTitle>Journal of Environmental Health Science &amp; Engineering</JournalTitle><Volume>8</Volume><Issue>2</Issue></Journal><ArticleTitle>THE EFFECT OF METAL OXIDES ON THE REFINERY EFFLUENT TREATMENT</ArticleTitle><FirstPage>147</FirstPage><LastPage>156</LastPage><AuthorList><Author><FirstName>G.</FirstName><LastName>Soltanian</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>M.</FirstName><LastName>Behbahani</LastName></Author></AuthorList><History><PubDate PubStatus="received"><Year>2015</Year><Month>12</Month><Day>09</Day></PubDate></History><Abstract>Metal Oxides (Titania TiO2, and Calamine (ZNO)) have been used as 
tertiary treatment for Refinery Effluent treatment and wastewaters to 
comply with the regulatory discharge limits and to oxidize persistent 
compounds that had not been oxidized in the biological treatment. The 
wastewater was provided by the Bandar Abbas Refinery. Although BOD 
removal is high in this plant, a residual and persistent COD (Chemical 
Oxygen Demand), besides a somewhat high phenol content remains. Three 
catalysts were tested TiO2 (Aldrich), ZnO (Aldrich), and TiO2 (P25, 
Degussa) by the UV radiation, the third being the most active. The 
optimized conditions obtained with an experimental design were 3.0 (g/L)
 TiO2 and pH=6.3. The use of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) showed no 
beneficial effect. Removal of 93% of phenols, 56% of dissolved organic 
carbon (DOC), and more than 50% of oil and grease (OG) were achieved in 
the catalytic process with UV radiation, improving the quality of the 
treated wastewater.</Abstract><web_url>https://ijehse.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jehse/article/view/300</web_url><pdf_url>https://ijehse.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jehse/article/download/300/299</pdf_url></Article></Articles>
