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 Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

The Utilization of Chitosan and Arduino Interface in Making a Microplastic Filter

2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kate Cyrene P. Pineda, Maeven Uriel A. Dela Cruz, Quirsten Daniel R. Repalda, Aldrin Jeynard A. Gonzales, DL Chaturika C. Douglas, Alina Siara D. Hajan, Julie Ann B. Real󠇒

Summary

Researchers developed a water filtration device combining chitosan—a biopolymer—with an Arduino microcontroller interface to capture microplastics from water, demonstrating an affordable, sensor-equipped filter system that could be deployed for monitoring and removal in water treatment applications.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics have emerged as a major issue of concern globally due to their effect on marine life, human health, and biodiversity as well as their presence in water sources. Removal of microplastic particles, which are generated from industrial waste, synthetic textiles, and plastic trash, is nearly impossible and their removal using standard filtration techniques is even more complicated. Furthermore, their presence in drinking water is increasingly becoming a global concern that poses a considerable threat of toxic chemicals and bioaccumulation through the food chain. In addition, the problem of controlling microplastic pollution is only a decade worse due to the exponential growth in the production of plastics. This study utilized the quantitative method and experimental design to solve the problem by creating a microplastic filtration device based on biopolymer chitosan filter and is enabled by an Arduino interface to improve detection and automated filtration process. The effectiveness of the device was evaluated by conducting experiments using different concentrations of microplastics for detection and removal and quantitatively measuring the results of the experiment. The Microplastic Filter demonstrated 100% detection accuracy across low, medium, and high concentrations of microplastics, and consistently extracted an average of 8.33 grams per liter from a 10-gram per liter solution within 44.33 seconds. Furthermore, the filter effectively removed microplastics of varying sizes, achieving an average extraction of 8 grams for 1- 2 millimeters particles and 9.33 grams for 2-5 millimeters particles creating a stable and efficient operation. This study underscores the effectiveness of the Microplastic Filter as a filtration medium for water. This filter demonstrated reliable performances in detecting and filtering microplastics, with high detection rates as well as high efficiency in removing the microplastics. The findings illustrate that the system provides an effective and scalable application for microplastic pollution removal with the capability for real-time monitoring and self-adjusting filtration. Recommendations: It is recommended to optimize the design of the filter by enhancing the filtration properties of materials, and improving its applications toward more universal solutions for water treatments.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

The use of chitosan for water purification from microplastics

Researchers investigated chitosan as a sorbent for removing microplastics from water, analyzing its physicochemical properties and proposing an optimized purification method based on chitosan's sorption characteristics.

Article Tier 2

Economical and Novel Microplastic Detection Using a Arduino-Based Turbidity Sensor: A Comprehensive Investigation

Researchers developed a low-cost Arduino-based turbidity sensor system for microplastic detection as an accessible alternative to expensive FTIR and Raman spectroscopy methods. The sensor demonstrated the ability to detect microplastic-induced changes in water clarity, offering a practical monitoring tool for low-resource settings and smaller waterways that are typically undersampled.

Article Tier 2

Innovative prototype for the mitigation of water pollution from microplastics to safeguard the environment and health

Researchers developed an innovative prototype device for removing microplastics from water through a combination of filtration and electrocoagulation, demonstrating high MP removal efficiency from both synthetic and real water samples in controlled trials.

Article Tier 2

A Novel Application of Filtration for the Collection of Microplastics in Waterways

Researchers developed a novel filtration system for collecting microplastics from waterways, demonstrating its effectiveness as a scalable and practical tool for environmental monitoring and plastic pollution assessment.

Article Tier 2

Utilization of chitosan as a natural coagulant for polyethylene microplastic removal

Scientists tested chitosan, a natural material derived from shellfish, as an eco-friendly way to remove polyethylene microplastics from water. Under the best conditions (pH 6.0 with 100 mg/L of chitosan), the treatment removed 81.5% of microplastics, offering a promising and environmentally safe approach to cleaning microplastic-contaminated water.

Share this paper