Curriculum Vitae

Pedro Neves de Carvalho

Data da última atualização »Last update : 12/08/2018


Pedro Neves de Carvalho. É Investigador Auxiliar - Aarhus Universitet. Publicou 34 artigos em revistas especializadas. Possui 2 itens de produção técnica. Actua na área de Química Nas suas actividades profissionais interagiu com 84 colaboradores em co-autorias de trabalhos científicos.


Endereço de acesso a este CV:

http://www.degois.pt/visualizador/curriculum.jsp?key=2541751728919209


Dados pessoais (Personal data)
Nome completo
Full name
Pedro Neves de Carvalho
Nome em citações bibliográficas
Quoting name
Carvalho, PN
Categoria profissional
Position
Investigador Auxiliar
Domínio científico de atuação
Scientific domain
Ciências Exactas-Química.
Engenharia e Tecnologia-Engenharia do Ambiente.
Ciências Naturais-Ciências da Terra e do Ambiente.
Engenharia e Tecnologia-Biotecnologia Ambiental.
Endereço profissional
Professional address
Aarhus Universitet
Department of Environmental Sciences
Frederiksborgvej 399
4000 Roskilde
Dinamarca
Telefone: (+45)87158462
Correio electrónico: pedro.carvalho@envs.au.dk
Homepage: http://pure.au.dk/portal/en/pedro.carvalho@envs.au.dk
Sexo
Gender
Masculino»Male




Graus Académicos (Academic Degrees)
2008-2012 Doutoramento
Phd
Doutoramento um Química (4 anos » years) .
Universidade do Porto, Portugal.

2006-2008 Mestrado
Master degree
Mestrado em Química (2 anos » years) .
Universidade do Porto, Portugal.

2002-2006 Licenciatura
Licentiate degree
Licenciatura em Química (4 anos » years) .
Universidade do Porto, Portugal.





Vínculos profissionais (Professional Positions)
Aarhus Universitet
Abr/2017-Actual Investigador Auxiliar

Aarhus Universitet
Abr/2013-Abr/2017 Outra Situação

Centro Interdisciplinar de Investigação Marinha e Ambiental
Out/2008-Dez/2012 Outra Situação

Universidade do Porto
Nov/2006-Ago/2008 Assistente de Investigação





Atividades de Investigação e Desenvolvimento (Research and Development activities)
Centro Interdisciplinar de Investigação Marinha e Ambiental
Out/2008-Actual
Linhas de investigação»Research fields:


Fate of pharmaceuticals in the environment


Analytical methodologies development


Remediation studies






Linhas de Investigação (Research fields)
1. Fate of pharmaceuticals in the environment
2. Analytical methodologies development
3. Remediation studies




Línguas (Languages)
Compreende
Understandig
Português (Bem), Inglês (Bem), Espanhol (Razoavelmente), Francês (Pouco), Dinamarquês (Razoavelmente).
Fala
Speaking
Português (Bem), Inglês (Bem), Espanhol (Razoavelmente), Francês (Razoavelmente), Dinamarquês (Pouco).

Reading
Português (Bem), Inglês (Bem), Espanhol (Razoavelmente), Francês (Pouco), Dinamarquês (Razoavelmente).
Escreve
Writing
Português (Bem), Inglês (Bem), Dinamarquês (Pouco).




Membro de Associações Profissionais/Científicas (Professional/Scientific Association membership)
Actual Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Membro.
Actual Young Water Professionals Denmark, Membro.




Produção científica, técnica e artística/cultural (Scientific, technical and artistical/cultural production)
Capítulos de livros publicados
Published book chapters
1. Almeida, {C M. R. 2016. Constructed wetlands for livestock wastewater treatment: Antibiotics removal and effects on CWs performance.  In Phytoremediation: Management of Environmental Contaminants, Volume 4, 267 - 281. ISBN: 9783319418100. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing AG.
<p>Constructed wetlands (CWs) are defined as engineered wetlands that utilize natural processes involving soil, wetland vegetation and their associated microbial assemblages to assist the treatment of wastewaters or other polluted water sources. Although CWs have been applied to different types of wastewaters, CWs application to livestock wastewaters is more complicated do to the characteristics of these waters and only a few studies have reported CWs application in these cases. Livestock wastewater can contain diverse veterinary drugs, including antibiotics, which are normally not removed in wastewater treatment plants. Consequently, veterinary antibiotics or their active compounds can enter directly in the water system through effluent discharges, which can lead to serious toxic effects in organisms and promote antibiotic resistance. Therefore, efficient wastewater treatments are needed. Considering the problematic of antibiotics release in the environment, the need for methodologies to efficiently remove these compounds from wastewater effluents, namely from livestock wastewater effluents, and the scarcity of studies on the application of CWs to deal with this problem, authors have been developing a series of studies to evaluated CWs applicability for livestock wastewater treatment. Studies have been assessing not only antibiotics removal but also antibiotic possible effects on CWs performance. These studies will be presented in this chapter.</p>.


Artigos em revistas com arbitragem científica
Papers in periodics with scientific refereeing
1. Zhang, Liang; Lyu, Tao; Zhang, Yang; Button, Mark; Arias, Carlos A; Weber, Kela P; Brix, Hans; Carvalho, Pedro N. 2018. "Impacts of design configuration and plants on the functionality of the microbial community of mesocosm-scale constructed wetlands treating ibuprofen", Water Research 131, -: 228 - 238.
2. Lyu, Tao; Zhang, Liang; Xu, Xiao; Arias, Carlos A; Brix, Hans; Carvalho, Pedro N. 2018. "Removal of the pesticide tebuconazole in constructed wetlands: Design comparison, influencing factors and modelling", Environmental Pollution 233, -: 71 - 80.
3. Carvalho, Pedro N; Basto, M. C. P; Almeida, C. M. R. 2012. "Potential of Phragmites australis for the removal of veterinary pharmaceuticals from aquatic media", Bioresource Technology 116, 0: 497 - 501.

Artigos em revistas sem arbitragem científica
Papers in periodics without scientific refereeing
1. Zhang, Yang; Lv, Tao; Carvalho, Pedro N; Zhang, Liang; Arias, Carlos A; Chen, Zhanghe; Brix, Hans. 2017. "Ibuprofen and iohexol removal in saturated constructed wetland mesocosms", Ecological Engineering 98, -: 394 - 402.
2. Lv, Tao; Zhang, Yang; Carvalho, Pedro N; Zhang, Liang; Button, Mark; Arias, Carlos A; Weber, Kela P; Brix, Hans. 2017. "Microbial community metabolic function in constructed wetland mesocosms treating the pesticides imazalil and tebuconazole", Ecological Engineering 98, -: 378 - 387.
3. Zhang, Liang; Lv, Tao; Zhang, Yang; Stein, Otto R; Arias, Carlos A; Brix, Hans; Carvalho, Pedro N. 2017. "Effects of constructed wetland design on ibuprofen removal – A mesocosm scale study", Science of The Total Environment 609, -: 38 - 45.
4. ¿?lvarez, J. A; ¿?vila, C.; Otter, P.; Kilian, R.; Isteni¿?, D.; Rolletschek, M.; Molle, P.; Khalil, N.; Ameršek, I.; Mishra, V. K; Jorgensen, C.; Garfi, A.; Carvalho, P.N.; Brix, H.; Arias, C. A. 2017. "Constructed wetlands and solar-driven disinfection technologies for sustainable wastewater treatment and reclamation in rural India: SWINGS project", Water Science and Technology 76, 6: 1474 - 14.
5. Lv, Tao; Carvalho, Pedro N; Casas, Mònica E; Bollmann, Ulla E; Arias, Carlos A; Brix, Hans; Bester, Kai. 2017. "Enantioselective uptake, translocation and degradation of the chiral pesticides tebuconazole and imazalil by Phragmites australis", Environmental Pollution 229, -: 362 - 370.
6. Lv, Tao; Carvalho, Pedro N; Zhang, Liang; Zhang, Yang; Button, Mark; Arias, Carlos A; Weber, Kela P; Brix, Hans. 2017. "Functionality of microbial communities in constructed wetlands used for pesticide remediation: Influence of system design and sampling strategy", Water Research 110, -: 241 - 251.
7. Luo, Hongzhen; Lv, Tao; Shi, Mingni; Wu, Shubiao; Carvalho, Pedro N; Dong, Renjie. 2017. "Stabilization of Preliminary Anaerobically Digested Slurry in Post-Storage: Dynamics of Chemical Characteristics and Hygienic Quality", Water, Air, & Soil Pollution 228, 8: 306 - 306.
8. Lv, Tao; Zhang, Yang; Zhang, Liang; Carvalho, Pedro N; Arias, Carlos A; Brix, Hans. 2016. "Removal of the pesticides imazalil and tebuconazole in saturated constructed wetland mesocosms", Water Research 91, -: 126 - 136.
9. Zhang, Yang; Carvalho, {Pedro N. 2016. "Microbial density and diversity in constructed wetland systems and the relation to pollutant removal efficiency", Water Science and Technology 73, 3: 679 - 686.
10. Lv, Tao; Zhang, Yang; Escola, Monica; Carvalho, {Pedro N. 2016. "Phytoremediation of imazalil and tebuconazole by four emergent wetland plant species in hydroponic medium", Chemosphere 148, -: 459 - 466.
11. Zhang, Yang; Lv, Tao; Carvalho, {Pedro N. 2016. "Removal of the pharmaceuticals ibuprofen and iohexol by four wetland plant species in hydroponic culture: plant uptake and microbial degradation", Environmental Science and Pollution Research 23, 3: 2890 - 28.
12. Wu, Shubiao; Carvalho, {Pedro N. 2016. "Sanitation in constructed wetlands: A review on the removal of human pathogens and fecal indicators", Science of the Total Environment 541, -: 8 - 22.
13. Kirui, Wesley K; Wu, Shubiao; Kizito, Simon; Carvalho, Pedro N; Dong, Renjie. 2016. "Pathways of nitrobenzene degradation in horizontal subsurface flow constructed wetlands: Effect of intermittent aeration and glucose addition", Journal of Environmental Management 166, -: 38 - 44.
14. Arias, {C. A. 2015. "Design and performance evaluation of a highly loaded aerated treatment wetland managing effluents from a food processing industry in Denmark", Water Practice and Technology 10, 4: 644 - 651.
15. Fernandes, {Joana P. 2015. "Microbial community dynamics associated with veterinary antibiotics removal in constructed wetlands microcosms", Bioresource Technology 182, -: 26 - 33.
16. Wu, Shubiao; Dong, Xinlong; Chang, Yongjiang; Carvalho, {Pedro N. 2015. "Response of a tidal operated constructed wetland to sudden organic and ammonium loading changes in treating high strength artificial wastewater", Ecological Engineering 82, -: 643 - 648.
17. Zhang, Yang; Lv, Tao; Carvalho, Pedro N; Arias, Carlos A; Chen, Zhanghe; Brix, Hans. 2015. "Removal of the pharmaceuticals ibuprofen and iohexol by four wetland plant species in hydroponic culture: plant uptake and microbial degradation", Environmental Science and Pollution Research 23, 3: 2890 - 28.
18. Carvalho, Pedro N; Basto, M. C. P; Almeida, C. M. R; Brix, Hans. 2014. "A review of plant–pharmaceutical interactions: from uptake and effects in crop plants to phytoremediation in constructed wetlands", Environmental Science and Pollution Research 21, 20: 11729 - 11763.
19. de Morais, P; Stoichev, Teodor; Basto, M. C. P; Carvalho, Pedro N; Vasconcelos, M. T. S. 2014. "Stability of Chlorophenols and Their Acetylated Derivatives in Water: Sample Storage Procedures", Journal of AOAC International 97, 1: 179 - 182.
20. Carvalho, Pedro; Araújo, J.L.; Basto, M.C.P.; Mucha, A.P.; Almeida, C.M.R.. 2013. "Potential of constructed wetlands microcosms for the removal of veterinary pharmaceuticals from livestock wastewater", Bioresource Technology 134, -: 412 - 416.
The aim of the present work was to evaluate, at microcosm level, the capacity of constructed wetlands (CWs) to remove veterinary pharmaceutical compounds, from wastewater. Results indicated that CWs have potential to mitigate the release of veterinary drugs, namely enrofloxacin (ENR, a fluoroquinolone) and tetracycline (TET, tetracyclines family). Removal efficiencies of 94% and 98% where achieved for TET and ENR, respectively, when treating pigfarm wastewater effluent doped at 100µgL drug level, along twelve weeks. Occurrence of adsorption of the drugs to CWs substrate may be the predominant mechanism for ENR, although for TET there are signs that degradation is also occurring. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.

21. Carvalho, Pedro; Pirra, A.; Basto, M.C.P.; Almeida, C.M.R.. 2013. "Multi-family methodologies for the analysis of veterinary pharmaceutical compounds in sediment and sludge samples: Comparison among extraction techniques", Analytical Methods 5, 22: 6503 - 65.
Veterinary drugs are still poorly studied in terms of pathways, release rates and effects on the environment. So, it is necessary to determine their levels in sewage sludge and soil/sediments affected by wastewaters. However, published methodologies deal usually with compounds from only a few classes. In addition, there is a lack of comparisons among the different extraction technologies used. A multi-family methodology for the simultaneous determination of minocycline, oxytetracycline, tetracycline (tetracyclines), enrofloxacin (fluoroquinolone) and ceftiofur (cephalosporin) in sludge and sediment was pursued. Three extraction techniques were compared, vortex agitation, ultrasonic extraction (USE) and microwave assisted extraction. Introduction of solid-phase extraction (SPE) for sample clean-up and pre-concentration was also evaluated. The complex matrix of solid samples posed specific problems, implying the need for individualized approaches for sediments and sludge. For sediments, USE sequential extraction (2 cycles) with methanol-acetone was chosen. LODs, when using SPE, ranged from 0.009 to 0.02 µg g. For sludge, samples were sequentially extracted three times by USE with methanol-formic acid. The SPE allowed lowering the limits 10 times ranging from 0.08 to 0.3 µg g for LODs. The method yielded good selectivity and acceptable recovery results. The present methodology resulted in suitable multi-family approaches, less common than the majority of similar processes published. © 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

22. Carvalho, P.N.; Pirra, A.; Basto, M.C.P.; Almeida, C.M.R.. 2013. "Activated sludge systems removal efficiency of veterinary pharmaceuticals from slaughterhouse wastewater", Environmental Science and Pollution Research 20, 12: 8790 - 88.
23. Cavenati, S.; Carvalho, P.N.; Almeida, C.M.R.; Basto, M.C.P.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2012. "Simultaneous determination of several veterinary pharmaceuticals in effluents from urban, livestock and slaughterhouse wastewater treatment plants using a simple chromatographic method", Water Science and Technology 66, 3: 603 - 611.
24. Carvalho, Pedro; Rodrigues, P.N.R.; Evangelista, R.; Basto, M.C.P.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2011. "Can salt marsh plants influence levels and distribution of DDTs in estuarine areas?", Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 93, 4: 415 - 419.
Sediments are depositories of toxic substances such as organochlorine pesticides and there is a global need for their removal in contaminated environments. Studies that combine contaminated sediments and phytoremediation are relatively recent and their number has been increasing. This work aimed to investigate whether salt marsh plants (sea club-rush Scirpus maritimus, sea rush Juncus maritimus and sea purslane Halimione portulacoides) can favor DDT and metabolites remediation in estuarine environment. For this purpose the levels of DDT, DDE and DDD were compared in vegetated and non-vegetated sediments from an estuary in the North of Portugal (in-situ study) and from another in the South of Portugal (ex-situ study). Results obtained both in the in-situ study, involving S. maritimus and J. maritimus, and in the ex-situ study, involving H. portulacoides, indicated that these plants did not have a significant role in DDTs removal and/or degradation. Therefore, it seems that the tested plants cannot influence levels and distribution of DDTs in estuarine areas. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.

25. Morais, De. 2011. "A headspace SPME-GC-ECD method suitable for determination of chlorophenols in water samples", Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 399, 7: 2531 - 25.
A headspace solid phase microextraction coupled to gas chromatography with electron capture detector (HS-SPME-GC-ECD) method was optimized for the determination of seven chlorophenols (CPs) with different levels of chlorination. This is the first time that HS-SPME-GC-ECD with acetylation of the analytes is used for the simultaneous determination of CPs in water samples. The influence of fibre type, derivatization conditions, salt addition, temperature and time of extraction and temperature of desorption was checked. Possible sources of contamination and analyte losses were considered. The best results were obtained with the polydimethylsiloxane/divinylbenzene fibre, derivatization by acetylation using 100 µL of acetic anhydride and 0.1 g of anhydrous sodium carbonate per 10 mL of sample, salt addition of 100 g L sodium chloride, extraction at 70 °C for 60 min and desorption in the GC injector at 260 °C for 6 min. The limits of detection (LOD) for monochlorophenols were 12 and 122 ng L for 2-chlorophenol and 4-chlorophenol, respectively. For polychlorinated CPs, the LODs were lower than 6 ng L , values similar to the existing methods that use SPME with derivatization for CPs determination in water samples. The method is suitable for the determination of CPs in most environmental aqueous samples. Repeatability and reproducibility were less than 16.8% and 11.7%, respectively. The optimized method was successfully applied for the analysis of waters with complex matrices such as river and estuarine water samples. © 2011 Springer-Verlag.

26. Carvalho, P.N.; Basto, M.C.P.; Silva, M.F.G.M.; Machado, A.; Bordalo, A.A.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2010. "Ability of salt marsh plants for TBT remediation in sediments", Environmental Science and Pollution Research 17, 6: 1279 - 12.
27. Carvalho, Pedro; Rodrigues, P.N.R.; Basto, M.C.P.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2009. "Organochlorine pesticides levels in Portuguese coastal areas", Chemosphere 75, 5: 595 - 600.
Data on levels of persistent organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) that exhibit potentially harmful effects to the environment all over the Portuguese coastal sediments were scarce. Therefore, in 2007-2008 12 OCPs were surveyed in surface sediments from 11 coastal sites (estuarine or lagoonal) covering north, centre and south areas of Portugal. Analyzes were performed using a previously validated method, involving pre-extraction of OCPs from sediments assisted by microwave and headspace solid-phase microextraction followed by gas chromatography with electron capture detection for quantification and mass spectrometry for OCPs identification. Measurable levels (0.08-26 ng g ) of a-hexachlorocyclohexane (a -HCH), ¿-hexachlorocyclohexane (lindane), aldrin, dieldrin, endrin, 4,4'-DDT, 4,4'-DDD, 4,4'-DDE, heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide, endosulfan I and methoxychlor were observed in all cases. In few cases, the found levels denote the probability of occurrence of adverse biological effects. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

28. Carvalho, Pedro; Rodrigues, P.N.R.; Basto, M.C.P.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2009. "Butyltin levels in several Portuguese coastal areas", Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 159, 1-4: 183 - 190.
This work aimed to report present levels (2007-2008 sampling) of tri- (TBT), di- (DBT), and monobutyltin (MBT) in surface sediments from 11 Portuguese coastal sites and discuss the evolution of BTs contamination in the last two decades. All the samples revealed quantifiable values of TBT, DBT, and MBT with total butyltin concentrations between 1 and 565 ng/g (of Sn in dry sediment). Maximum level of TBT, 66 ng/g, was observed in Sado estuary, at Lisnave site, in the proximity of a big shipyard. MBT decreased site by site by the same order as DBT and TBT did, but its concentrations were much higher in many cases, denoting that TBT contamination was much higher in the past. A comparison with the available previous data confirmed a marked decrease of TBT contamination all over the last years, indicating that the main sources of TBT in Portuguese coastwise stopped effectively. © 2008 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

29. Carvalho, Pedro; Rodrigues, P.N.R.; Alves, F.; Evangelista, R.; Basto, M.C.P.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2008. "An expeditious method for the determination of organochlorine pesticides residues in estuarine sediments using microwave assisted pre-extraction and automated headspace solid-phase microextraction coupled to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry", Talanta 76, 5: 1124 - 11.
Determination of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in sediments implicates extraction of these compounds from the matrix, which is difficult owing to strong interaction among OCPs and different constituents of the sediments, particularly organic content. The method here described is a combination of microwave assisted extraction (MAE), headspace solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), acting in selected-ion storage mode, or GC-electron capture detector (ECD, for routine analysis). Methanol was used as extracting solvent and aliquots of the MAE extracts (after inclusion of a step for sulfur elimination when required) were used to prepare aqueous solutions for HS-SPME. A complete automation of the SPME procedure increases the sample throughput, including standard addition for calibration purpose. The procedure has the advantage of exclude additional clean-up steps and pre-concentration before SPME. Application to reference sediments of different characteristics revealed absence of significant interferences from the matrix for a-lindane, ¿-lindane, aldrin, dieldrin, endrin, 4,4'-DDT, 4,4'-DDD, 4,4'-DDE, heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide and good sensitivity. Detection limits ranged from 0.005 to 0.11 ng of OCP per gram of dried sediment using GC-MS and from 0.01 to 0.26 ng g using GC-ECD. The linear response ranges embraced 5-6 orders of magnitude (up to 1000 ng g) in GC-MS, being narrower for GC-ECD. The method was successfully applied to sandy and muddy sediments from Portuguese rivers estuaries, enabling quantification of seven OCPs. The method resulted effective, relatively simple and fast, being suitable for routine monitoring of residues of OCPs from sediments of different grain size and organic matter content, which influence concentration, mobility and availability of contaminants. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

30. Stoichev, T.; Baptista, M.S.; Basto, M.C.P.; Carvalho, Pedro; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2008. "Application of SPME to the determination of alkylphenols and bisphenol A in cyanobacteria culture media", Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 391, 1: 425 - 432.
In order to survey the influence of estrogenic compounds on cyanobacteria, solid-phase microextraction (SPME) with a carbowax-divinylbenzene fibre was used for the determination of tert-octylphenol (tert-OP), n-nonylphenol (n-NP), technical nonylphenol (tech-NP) and bisphenol A (BPA) in cyanobacteria culture media by gas chromatography with flame ionization detection. Determinations were carried out without derivatization in deionized water and filtered culture media. A comparison between f2 and Fraquil culture media was performed, which showed that only f2 allowed quantitative recoveries. Headspace SPME with salting out, requiring only 10 mL of sample, was suitable for tert-OP, n-NP, and tech-NP determination with limits of detection (LOD) of .

31. Carvalho, Pedro; Pinto, L.F.; Basto, M.C.P.; Vasconcelos, M.T.S.D.. 2007. "Headspace solid-phase micro-extraction and gas chromatography-ion trap tandem mass spectrometry method for butyltin analysis in sediments: Optimization and validation", Microchemical Journal 87, 2: 147 - 153.
In this work, headspace solid-phase micro-extraction (SPME) combined with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) method for analysis of butyltin compounds in sediment samples was upgraded by the introduction of tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Optimization and validation of this method based on an one step procedure, tetraethylborate in situ ethylation with simultaneous extraction by headspace SPME, combined with tandem mass spectrometry is described. A simple leaching/extraction step of mono-(M), di-(D) and tri-(T) butyltin (BT) compounds from the sediment is required as sample pre-treatment. The combination of the two techniques headspace SPME and MS/MS, led to very little matrix interference which permitted to attain limits of detection three or more orders of magnitude lower than those attained in previous methods: 0.3 pg g for MBT, 1 pg g for DBT and 0.4 pg g for TBT. Linear response range was from 0.02-1260 ng g for MBT, 0.07-1568 ng g for DBT and 0.04-2146 ng g for TBT and RSD &lt;15% was also obtained. The method was efficiently applied to a real sample sediment from Sado River estuary in Portugal, revealing the existence of BTs pollution, as the TBT level of 189 ± 15 ng g was much higher than the maximum established as provisional ecotoxicological assessment criteria. © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.




Apresentação oral de trabalho
Oral work presentation
1. Vargas, Carlos A. R; Arias, Carlos A; Carvalho, Pedro; Brix, Hans. Removal Kinetics of Organic Matter and Nitrogen Using Microbial Electrochemical Based - Constructed Wetlands (iMETland),2016 (Poster).
In recent years the combination of Constructed Wetlands and Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC), has led to an innovative set- up for wastewater treatment and energy harvesting, relaying on electrodes and external circuits (CW – MFC).<br/>Based on this approach, a new concept is being developed to create the Microbial Electrochemical-based Constructed Wetland (iMETland). In this system electro- active bacteria – EAB (e.g. Geobacter sp., Shewanella spp) are stimulated to release and transfer electrons to an electro-conductive material that act as unlimited electron acceptor, maximizing the substrate consumption.<br/>The iMETland technology is still in development and therefore uncertainties still exist regarding the dynamics in the removal of pollutants, as well as in its performance along time. To elucidate these uncertainties, a benchmark study is being conducted to characterize the processes and interactions n the removal of organic matter, nutrients and pollutants of interest in the systems.

2. Bester, Kai; Bollmann, Ulla E; Casas, Mònica E; Brandt, Kristian K; Lyu, Tao; Carvalho, Pedro; Brix, Hans. Biodegradation of biocides in soils, soil filters and other biofilm reactors,2016 (Poster).





Dados Complementares (Additional data)


Outros Trabalhos
Other production
1. Carvalho, PN. Constructed wetlands for water treatment, 2017.








Indicadores de produção (Production indicators)

Total
Produção científica
Scientific production
35

Livros e capítulos
Books and book chapters
1
Capítulos de livros publicados
Published book chapters
1
Artigos científicos em revistas
Papers in periodics
34
Com arbitragem científica
With scientific refereeing
3
Sem arbitragem científica
Without scientific refereeing
31

Total
Produção técnica
Technical production
2

Outros tipos de produção técnica
Other technical production
2

Total
Dados complementares
(Additional data)
1

Outros Trabalhos
Other production
1


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