Simultaneous heavy metal immobilization and antibiotics removal during synergetic treatment of sewage sludge and pig manure.

2020 
The safe handling of heavy metals and antibiotics during waste disposal has attracted wide attention. In the present study, hydrothermally treated sewage sludge was used for co-pyrolysis with different concentration ratios of pig manure at 600 °C for heavy metal immobilization and antibiotic removal. Heavy metals (except Cd) were mainly retained in the biochar samples due to a high degree of decomposition characteristic of organic matter. Pyrolysis significantly immobilized the heavy metals via converting unstable F1 + F2 + F3 fractions (acid-soluble fraction + reducible fraction + oxidizable fraction) to stable F4 fraction (residual fraction), and more pig manure addition led to improved immobilization performance. After co-pyrolysis, the potential environmental risk of feedstocks reduced significantly and the addition of 50 wt.% of pig manure gave a minimum potential ecological risk index of 10.36 with a low risk of contamination. In addition, six types of antibiotics in feedstocks were decomposed completely during pyrolysis. The co-pyrolysis process showed numerous advantages in the synthetic treatment of sewage sludge and pig manure by reducing the heavy metal toxicity and antibiotic levels.
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