6533b7d2fe1ef96bd125ea9a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Emerging technologies for enhanced removal of residual antibiotics from source-separated urine and wastewaters: A review.

K.o. ImweneE. NgumbaP.k. Kairigo

subject

Environmental Engineeringconstructed wetlandmicrobial adsorptionbiokemikaalitjätevesiManagement Monitoring Policy and LawWastewaterWaste Disposal FluidantibioticskosteikotSoilAmmoniaHumansWaste Management and DisposalEcosystemvesistötSewageantibiootitWaterGeneral MedicineAnti-Bacterial AgentsbioelectrochemicaljäämätPharmaceutical PreparationsEnvironmental PollutantsbiocharsWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental Monitoring

description

Antibiotic residues are of significant concern in the ecosystem because of their capacity to mediate antibiotic resistance development among environmental microbes. This paper reviews recent technologies for the abatement of antibiotics from human urine and wastewaters. Antibiotics are widely distributed in the aquatic environment as a result of the discharge of municipal sewage. Their existence is a cause for worry due to the potential ecological impact (for instance, antibiotic resistance) on bacteria in the background. Numerous contaminants that enter wastewater treatment facilities and the aquatic environment, as a result, go undetected. Sludge can act as a medium for some chemicals to concentrate while being treated as wastewater. The most sewage sludge that has undergone treatment is spread on agricultural land without being properly checked for pollutants. The fate of antibiotic residues in soils is hence poorly understood. The idea of the Separation of urine at the source has recently been propagated as a measure to control the flow of pharmaceutical residues into centralized wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). With the ever increasing acceptance of urine source separation practices, visibility and awareness on dedicated treatement technologies is needed. Human urine, as well as conventional WWTPs, are point sources of pharmaceutical micropollutants contributing to the ubiquitous detection of pharmaceutical residues in the receiving water bodies. Focused post-treatment of source-separated urine includes distillation and nitrification, ammonia stripping, and adsorption processes. Other reviewed methods include physical and biological treatment methods, advanced oxidation processes, and a host of combination treatment methods. All these are aimed at ensuring minimized risk products are returned to the environment. peerReviewed

10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116065https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36063692