May 1, 2026
Mohsen Abbasi

Mohsen Abbasi

Academic Rank: Associate professor
Address:
Degree: Ph.D in Chemical Engineering
Phone: 07731221495
Faculty: Faculty of Petroleum, Gas and Petrochemical Engineering

Research

Title Advanced multi-stage greywater treatment: Sand filtration, electrocoagulation, and photo-Fenton for enhanced reuse potential
Type Article
Keywords
Greywater treatment AOPs COD BOD Turbidity Filtration Fenton process Coagulation Total phosphorus
Journal Cleaner Engineering and Technology
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clet.2026.101195
Researchers ali bahrini (First researcher) , Amin Mahmoudi (Second researcher) , Mohsen Abbasi (Third researcher) , Reza Shahouni (Fourth researcher)

Abstract

Water scarcity poses a critical global challenge, necessitating sustainable solutions such as greywater reuse. This study introduces an innovative multi-stage treatment system for restaurant-generated greywater, integrating sand filtration, electrocoagulation, photo-Fenton oxidation, and activated carbon filtration to achieve highefficiency contaminant removal. Unlike previous studies limited to individual or binary treatment methods, this work uniquely integrates all four stages into a single sequentially optimized system for high-strength restaurant greywater. The system was evaluated using greywater with varying chemical oxygen demand (COD) concentrations (484–904 mg/L), focusing on optimizing parameters such as flow rate, electrode type, voltage, pH, and reagent concentrations. Results demonstrated exceptional pollutant reduction: COD by 99.17%, biological oxygen demand (BOD) by 98.64%, turbidity by 99%, detergents by 94.84%, and total phosphorus by 93.54%. Sand filtration and electrocoagulation served as effective pre-treatment steps, reducing initial pollutant loads, while the photo-Fenton process, optimized at pH 3 with 125 mg/L iron sulfate and 137.5 mg/L hydrogen peroxide, achieved up to 92.85% COD removal. Activated carbon filtration further enhanced COD reduction but showed limited turbidity improvement. The treated effluent met international standards for unrestricted nonpotable reuse, maintaining a pH of 6.5–8.5. This synergistic approach offers a robust, scalable framework for greywater treatment, advancing sustainable water management practices in water-scarce regions.