Mostrando 1 - 3 Resultados de 3 Para Buscar 'Zapata Gamarra, Hernán', tiempo de consulta: 0.01s Limitar resultados
1
artículo
The use of clean technologies for the treatment of textile effluents is essential to achieve a significant contribution by the textile industry, environmental treatment of them. According to the literature, the dyes used in textile industry are hardly degradable and have strong opposition to biological treatments are subjected to appropriate wastewater. At lower concentrations of hydrogen peroxide (oxygenated water) leads to better dye fading. It also shows that lower concentrations of titanium dioxide system response to the degradation of color, is better, this could be because that lower concentrations of titanium dioxide, hydroxyl radical formation is lower, thus increasing its efficiency the process. The optimum time for color degradation is 2 h and the concentration of titanium dioxide to achieve this time was 50 ppm
2
artículo
The use of clean technologies for the treatment of textile effluents is essential to achieve a significant contribution by the textile industry, environmental treatment of them. According to the literature, the dyes used in textile industry are hardly degradable and have strong opposition to biological treatments are subjected to appropriate wastewater. At lower concentrations of hydrogen peroxide (oxygenated water) leads to better dye fading. It also shows that lower concentrations of titanium dioxide system response to the degradation of color, is better, this could be because that lower concentrations of titanium dioxide, hydroxyl radical formation is lower, thus increasing its efficiency the process. The optimum time for color degradation is 2 h and the concentration of titanium dioxide to achieve this time was 50 ppm
3
artículo
This study evaluates microplastic pollution, persistent organic pollutants (POPs), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the Bay of Callao, Peru. Sampling was conducted at six stations from Playa Pachacútec to La Punta, 500 meters from the coast. The collected microplastics were quantified, identifying adsorbed contaminant groups: PAHs, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), DDT metabolites (DDX), pentachlorobenzene (PeCB), hexachlorobenzene (HeCB), and hexachlorocyclohexane (HCHs). The results showed 97.1204 items/m³ of microplastics, equivalent to 5,170,073.7321 items/km². Concentrations were 1749 ng/g for PAHs, 151.7 ng/g for PCBs, 311 ng/g for DDX, 13.0 ng/g for PeCB and HeCB, and 3.72 ng/g for HCHs. Compared to other studies, the Bay of Callao presents similar or higher contamination levels, especially in PAHs and DDX. This underscores the need for mitigation measures to redu...