Özkal, Can BurakKoruyucu, AslıhanMeriç, Süreyya2022-05-112022-05-1120161944-39941944-3986https://doi.org/10.1080/19443994.2016.1155175https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11776/5444Most antibiotics have been demonstrated to be low biodegradable in biological treatment systems, thus advanced oxidation processes, particularly solar photocatalytic oxidation also known as a green process, have gained an essential attraction for their effective removal from effluents. However, so far there has been a very limited number of studies on ampicillin (AMP) removal that focused on one initial concentration of AMP and fixed photon energy. Therefore, this study was designed to investigate the effect of varying pH and incident photon fluxes on heterogeneous photocatalytic AMP removal at two AMP initial concentrations (50 and 100mgL(-1)) using 0.5gL(-1) TiO2 dose under UV-A (315-400nm wavelengths) irradiation. Photocatalytic experiments were run in a vessel with 200-mL effective sample volume. Process efficiency was monitored by degradation (UV-vis, LC-MS/MS), mineralization (TOC), and acute toxicity to Daphnia magna during 24-48h exposure times to evaluate possible toxic effect of oxidation by-products. Toxicity results and TOC removal (30-60min) indicated simultaneous mineralization and degradation of both initial AMP concentrations. Lower ratio of TiO2/AMP, as one of the key factors affecting the oxidation efficiency, promoted increasing formation of by-products that interacted with surface chemistry on TiO2 nanoparticles leading to a process efficiency decrease at 100mgL(-1) AMP initial concentration. When photon energy was increased, it enhanced the removal of AMP. A preliminary cost evaluation showed that a 3.62mWcm(-2) energy flux was satisfying to obtain over 50% of TOC removal and a nearly complete detoxification of 50mgL(-1) AMP.en10.1080/19443994.2016.1155175info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessAmpicillinDegradationDetoxificationPhoton energyMinerilizationHeterogeneous photocatalysisTiO2Daphnia magnaAdvanced Oxidation ProcessesTreatment PlantsAntibioticsEnvironmentHeterogeneous photocatalytic degradation, mineralization and detoxification of ampicillin under varying pH and incident photon flux conditionsArticle57391839118397Q2WOS:0003786202000292-s2.0-84961211618Q3