2008 Annual Meeting
(353d) Advanced Oxidation of Pharmaceuticals: Preparing for Indirect and Direct Water Reuse
Authors
In particular, this research focuses on advanced oxidation, via the peroxone (ozone/hydrogen peroxide) process, of two antibiotic drugs, namely, ciprofloxacin and gemifloxacin. Research tasks include the following: determine removal rates of target PhACs in the presence of varying background organic matter matrices derived from natural and reuse water sources; identify intermediate products that exhibit antibiotic activity; assess whether parent compound removal efficacy is directly proportional to eliminating residual pharmacological activity (RPA) or if intermediate products exert a significant fraction of RPA, which will be determined using a modified minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) bioassay; develop a technique that can be employed to evaluate and optimize RPA removal from natural and impacted waters while minimizing pharmacologically active intermediates and advanced oxidation by-products.
The overarching goal of this research is development of a generalized strategy for assessing and predicting PhAC treatment efficacy, in terms of RPA removal, as a function of background organic matter matrix, treatment design, and operating parameters.