2,725 research outputs found
Shortcut biological nitrogen removal (SBNR) in microbial fuel cells (MFCs)
Microbial Fuel Cells (MFCs) represent nowadays a promising technology for the treatment of industrial wastewater. In this work the Shortcut Nitritation/Denitritation process in H-type MFC was investigated. The cell was fed by sodium acetate and fumaric acid, as organic carbon source, and ammonium sulphate, sodium nitrite and sodium nitrate as nitrogen source. Anaerobic digestion supernatant (digestate) was used as bacterial source. Batch tests were performed at a TOC/N ratio of 0.35, and Total Organic Carbon (TOC), pH and Open Circuit Voltage (OCV) were daily monitored. High organic carbon removal (up to 85%) in short time (within 6 days) were achieved. The nitritation proved to be independent of organic carbon amount and composition: an ammonium content reduction of about 45% was observed. Regarding the denitritation step, an almost quantitative removal of nitrite and nitrate was observed when fumaric acid was used as a carbon source
Photolysis of in-situ electrogenerated hydrogen peroxide for the degradation of emerging pollutants
This study investigates the degradation of paracetamol, an emerging contaminant widely used as pain and fever reliever, by means of hydrogen peroxide either alone or in combination with UV-C photolysis. In particular, we provide a comparison between the performance of both commercial and electrogenerated H2O2 whose production has been achieved by galvanostatic electrolysis in undivided reactor with a gas diffusion cathode. The performance of the treatments has been assessed in terms of both pollutant decay and mineralization. The influence of the H2O2 to paracetamol molar ratio is discussed. The results show that the electrogenerated hydrogen peroxide, when activated by UV-C irradiation, results in faster degradation and mineralization of paracetamol. However, under the conditions adopted, complete depletion of the total organic carbon (TOC) has never been attained
Shortcut Biological Nitrogen Removal (SBNR) in an MFC anode chamber under microaerobic conditions. The effect of C/N ratio and kinetic study
In this work, the feasibility of the Shortcut Biological Nitrogen Removal (SBNR) in the anodic chamber of a Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) was investigated. Thirty day experiments were carried out using synthetic wastewaters with a Total Organic Carbon vs. nitrogen ratio (TOC/N) ranging from 0.1 to 1. Ammonium, nitrite, nitrate, pH, and TOC were daily monitored. Results showed that microaerobic conditions in the anodic chamber favored the development of nitritation reaction, due to oxygen transfer from the cathodic chamber through the membrane. Nitritation was found to depend on TOC/N ratio: at TOC/N equal to 0.1 an ammonium removal efficiency of up to 76% was observed. Once the oxygen supply to the cathodic chamber was stopped, denitritation occurred, favored by an increase of the TOC/N ratio: a nitrite removal of 80.3% was achieved at TOC/N equal to 0.75. The presence of nitrogen species strongly affected the potential of the electrochemical system: in the nitritation step, the Open Circuit Voltage (OCV) decreased from 180 mV to 21 mV with the decrease of the TOC/N ratio in the investigated range. Lower OCV values were observed in the denitritation steps since the organic carbon acted as the energy source for the conversion of nitrite to nitrogen gas. A kinetic analysis was also performed. Monod and Blackman models described the ammonium and the organic carbon removal processes well during the nitritation step, respectively, while Blackman-Blackman fitted experimental results of the denitritation step better
From soil remediation to biofuel. Process simulation of bioethanol production from Arundo donax
A range of energy crops can be grown on marginal land (i.e. land that is not suitable for food crop production or contaminated site) to provide feedstocks for bioenergy, non-food products and biofuels. The food versus fuel debate had a significant negative impact in Europe on first generation biofuels production from food crops (i.e. wheat, rapeseed, etc). A new approach involving the use of marginal land for the production of lignocellulosic species for the production of bioethanol is now pursued in Italy and in many other countries, where the demand for high quality water resources, arable land, food and fossil fuels is rapidly growing. With an emerging “feed versus fuel debate” there is a pressing need to find options for the use of marginal lands and wastewaters or saline ground waters to produce second generation biofuel or bio paper crops. Arundo donax was selected as a potential crop for use in these areas, since it produces more cellulosic biomass and sequesters more contaminants, using less land and pesticides than any other alternative crops reported in the literature. The objective of this paper is to evaluate economically a simplified process for the production of second generation bioethanol from A. donax. Process calculations and economic analyses are performed using the software SuperPro Designer®
Bebè racconta la guerra. Propaganda fascista e dischi per bambini (1920-1930)
Soon after the appointment of Benito Mussolini as Italian prime minister in 1922, the indoctrination of young people became one of the primary business of the fascist agenda. Although several studies have shown how literature, comics, and radio broadcastings broadly contributed to these processes of consensus building, the world of recordings for children has received scant attention, except for works concerning educational activities in connection with the music appreciation movement. This article attempts at casting light on this little-known sector of Italian cultural industry, starting from a general survey of recordings for children in the international market – a context to which Italian experiences must necessarily be referred. Then, products published in the 1920s and 1930s by La Voce del Padrone and Columbia are analysed, focusing in particular on two preeminent releases by the latter: a "speaking book" which narrates the rise of Fascism through texts, paintings, and recordings; and a "sound story" of Micky Mouse as a soldier in the Italo-Ethiopian War (1935-1936). The aim is to contextualise these recordings in the processes of industrialisation of the Italian cultural market, showing their contribution to the militarization of juvenile imaginaries of war
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