-Fresh-cut wastewater reclamation: Techno-Economical assessment of solar driven processes at pilot plant scale
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Abstract
Up-scaling of solar processes for water purification is a key challenge for their implementation at industrial scale
on the agro-food sector. Benefits of using flow-tubular reactors provided with Compound Parabolic Collector
mirrors have been previously demonstrated, nevertheless some techno-economic aspects still being unknown.
This study shows a comparative analysis of the treatment efficiency of H2O2/solar, Fe3+-EDDHA/solar and
Fe3+-EDDHA/H2O2/solar as novel processes for treating synthetic fresh-cut wastewater (SFCWW) containing
100 NTU of turbidity. The highest treatment capability was obtained with Fe3+-EDDHA/H2O2/solar (2.5/
20 mg/L-Fe3+-EDDHA/H2O2), attaining the fastest microbial inactivation kinetics (> 5-log of Escherichia coli
O157:H7 and Salmonella enteritidis) and organic microcontaminants (OMCs) degradation (36 % of 5 OMCs) in 60
and 120 min, respectively.
Treated SFCWW by Fe3+-EDDHA/H2O2/solar process fits microbiological quality established in water reuse
guidelines for irrigation, no bacterial reactivation after 24 h post-treatment, no significant ecotoxicity and
treatment cost was estimated as 1.10 (only disinfection) and 2.10 €/m3 (simultaneous disinfection and decontamination).

