0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Microplastics, Antibiotics, and Heavy Metals in Anaerobic Digestion Systems: A Critical Review of Sources, Impacts, and Mitigation Strategies

Recycling 2025 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hongbo Liu, Yuan Xiang, Yuan Xiang, Ying Yao, L. Yao, Junbo Zhang, Claudia Maurer

Summary

This review examines how microplastics, antibiotics, and heavy metals interact within anaerobic digestion systems used for organic waste treatment. Researchers found that microplastics accumulate in the digestate and act as carriers for toxic chemicals and pathogens, while antibiotics drive the spread of antibiotic resistance genes and heavy metals inhibit the microorganisms essential for the digestion process. The study emphasizes the need for better strategies to manage these co-occurring contaminants in waste treatment systems.

Study Type Environmental

The widespread implementation of anaerobic digestion (AD) systems for organic waste treatment is increasingly challenged by emerging contaminants, including microplastics (MPs), antibiotics, and heavy metals (HMs), which exhibit environmental persistence and pose risks to ecological and human health. This review critically examines the sources, transformation pathways, and advanced mitigation strategies for these contaminants within AD systems. MPs, primarily derived from fragmented plastics and personal care products, accumulate in digestates and act as vectors for adsorbing toxic additives and pathogens. Antibiotics, introduced via livestock manure and wastewater, exert selective pressures that propagate antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) while disrupting methanogenic consortia. HMs, originating from industrial and agricultural activities, impair microbial activity through bioaccumulation and enzymatic interference, with their bioavailability modulated by speciation shifts during digestion. To combat these challenges, promising mitigation approaches include the following: (1) bioaugmentation with specialized microbial consortia to enhance contaminant degradation and stabilize HMs; (2) thermal hydrolysis pretreatment to break down MPs and antibiotic residues; (3) chemical passivation using biochar or sulfides to immobilize HMs. Co-digestion practices inadvertently concentrate these contaminants, with MPs and HMs predominantly partitioning into solid phases, while antibiotics persist in both liquid and solid fractions. These findings highlight the urgency of optimizing mitigation strategies to minimize contaminant mobility and toxicity. However, critical knowledge gaps persist regarding the long-term impacts of biodegradable MPs, antibiotic transformation byproducts, and standardized regulatory thresholds for contaminant residues in digestate. This synthesis underscores the necessity for integrated engineering solutions and policy frameworks to ensure the safe resource recovery from AD systems, balancing energy production with environmental sustainability.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastics, antibiotics, and heavy metals in anaerobic digestion systems : a critical review of sources, impacts, and mitigation strategies

This critical review examined how microplastics, antibiotics, and heavy metals—as co-occurring contaminants—affect the performance of anaerobic digestion systems, finding that all three impair microbial processes, reduce biogas yields, and accumulate in digestates that are then applied to agricultural soils.

Article Tier 2

Unmasking microplastics in anaerobic digestion: Hidden threats, synergistic pollutants, and biodegradation Frontiers — A comprehensive hotspot review

Researchers reviewed how microplastics disrupt anaerobic digestion — the process used to convert organic waste into biogas — finding that microplastics suppress methane production, harm microbial communities, and carry along other pollutants like antibiotics and heavy metals into the system.

Article Tier 2

The removal of microplastics in the wastewater treatment process and their potential impact on anaerobic digestion due to pollutants association

A review of microplastics in wastewater treatment found that while treatment processes transfer most microplastics from water into sludge, this concentrated plastic material then carries adsorbed pollutants like antibiotics and heavy metals into anaerobic digestion systems. The desorption behavior of these toxic compounds from microplastics under digestion conditions is identified as a key determinant of whether sludge treatment remains effective and safe.

Review Tier 2

Occurrence, influence and removal strategies of mycotoxins, antibiotics and microplastics in anaerobic digestion treating food waste and co-digestive biosolids: A critical review

This critical review assesses the occurrence and fate of mycotoxins, antibiotics, and microplastics in food waste anaerobic digestion systems, finding that microplastics persist through digestion and may carry adsorbed contaminants into digestate applied to land.

Review Tier 2

A review on mechanistic understanding of microplastic pollution on the performance of anaerobic digestion

This review examines how microplastic contamination affects anaerobic digestion, a process used to convert organic waste into biogas. Researchers found that microplastics can harm the microbial communities essential to this process through direct contact, leaching of toxic chemicals, and generating harmful reactive oxygen species. The findings raise concerns that microplastic pollution could reduce the efficiency of waste treatment systems and contribute to the spread of antibiotic resistance genes.

Share this paper