PL EN
Biocompatibility assessment of chemically treated mixed municipal-industrial wastewater for high-purity and medical reuse applications
 
Więcej
Ukryj
1
Department of Scientific Basic Sciences, Faculty of Engineering Technology, Al-Balqa Applied University, Al-Salt, Jordan.
 
2
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Tabuk, Analytical Chemistry Research Laboratory, Tabuk, Saudi Arabia
 
 
Autor do korespondencji
Reem Dabaibeh   

Department of Scientific Basic Sciences, Faculty of Engineering Technology, Al-Balqa Applied University, Al-Salt, Jordan.
 
 
 
SŁOWA KLUCZOWE
DZIEDZINY
STRESZCZENIE
While contaminant removal efficiency is considered when evaluating chemical wastewater treatment, this paradigm may be insufficient for medical-grade and high-purity water applications where biological safety (biocompatibility) is critical. As wastewater reuse expands into medically sensitive contexts, physicochemical indicators alone may fail to capture residual treatment-associated risks. This study presents a two-tier assessment integrating physicochemical performance (Tier 1) with direct biocompatibility evaluation (Tier 2) through in vitro cytotoxicity and endotoxin analysis. Mixed municipal–industrial wastewater treated using coagulation–flocculation (100 mg/L FeCl₃) followed by granular activated carbon adsorption (5 g/L) achieved high removal efficiencies (72.1% COD, 84.5% BOD₅, 84.6% TSS, 88.7% turbidity, and 62–80% heavy metals). Despite these efficiencies, full-strength effluent exposure reduced cell viability to 68.3 ± 5.1%, below the 70% ISO 10993-5 cytotoxicity threshold, and endotoxin levels (0.38 ± 0.06 EU/mL) exceeded dialysis-water benchmarks (0.25 EU/mL). A statistically significant negative correlation between residual dissolved iron and cell viability revealed a disconnect between removal efficiency and biological safety. These results support the Biocompatibility–Process Efficiency (BPE) integrated framework, demonstrating that optimization for high-purity reuse must balance contaminant removal with biologically relevant safety endpoints.
Journals System - logo
Scroll to top