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Performance of biochars for the elimination of trace organic contaminants and metals from urban stormwater

  • Stephanie Spahr
  • , Marc Teixidó
  • , Sarah S. Gall
  • , James C. Pritchard
  • , Nikolas Hagemann
  • , Brigitte Helmreich
  • , Richard G. Luthy
  • Stanford University
  • NSF Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt)
  • Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries
  • Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
  • Spanish Research Council - CSIC
  • Technical University of Munich
  • Ithaka Institute GGmbH
  • Forschungsanstalt Agroscope Reckenholz-Tänikon ART

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

Urban stormwater carries dissolved organic and metal contaminants that pose risks to water supplies and the environment. Green infrastructure elements such as biofilters have the potential to capture and treat urban stormwater prior to infiltration to groundwater. Because conventional sand-based biofilters often fail to eliminate dissolved contaminants from stormwater, there is a need to improve biofilter treatment efficiency. In our study, we investigated four different wood-derived biochars for the removal of seven trace organic contaminants (TrOCs, atenolol, benzotriazole, dicamba, diuron, fipronil, mecoprop, terbutryn) and five metals (cadmium, copper, lead, nickel, zinc). Three biochars were produced at pyrolysis temperatures of 400 °C, 580 °C, and 750 °C, and one biochar of biomass gasification (1100-1400 °C). Batch experiments conducted with synthetic stormwater showed that the removal capacity of the biochars increased with increasing production temperature and specific surface area. The gasification biochar outperformed the three pyrolysis biochars and was further tested in flow-through column experiments operated for more than eight months and 4000 pore volumes. The least retained organic contaminant was dicamba followed by fipronil and terbutryn. Using a 1-D forward prediction intraparticle diffusion-limited sorption model, 20% breakthrough of dicamba was estimated to occur at 1100 and 5300 pore volumes in biochar-amended sand filters containing 1 to 10 weight percent biochar, respectively. Based on these results, case study calculations for a full-scale biochar filter in Los Angeles, CA, suggest potential service lifetimes of five years and longer when using dicamba as an indicator compound for early TrOC breakthrough.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1287-1299
Number of pages13
JournalEnvironmental Science: Water Research and Technology
Volume8
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 6 May 2022

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