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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Are we overestimate the contribution of microplastics from industrial laundry? Microplastic exploration in an industrial laundry: Quantification and elimination

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jes Vollertsen Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Yuanli Liu, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Anne-Charlotte Hanning, Jytte Dencker, Jes Vollertsen Anne-Charlotte Hanning, Jytte Dencker, Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Anne-Charlotte Hanning, Anne-Charlotte Hanning, Rupa Chand, Rupa Chand, Emma Gunnerblad, Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Rupa Chand, Jytte Dencker, Emma Gunnerblad, Jytte Dencker, Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Anne-Charlotte Hanning, Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Anne-Charlotte Hanning, Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen Jes Vollertsen

Summary

Researchers investigated microplastic contributions from an industrial laundry in Sweden and tested two filtration technologies for removal. Both drum filtration and ultrafiltration achieved over 90% microplastic removal efficiency by mass, with polyester and smaller fragments being the most prevalent particles. However, a mass balance analysis revealed that local town wastewater contributed even more microplastics than the industrial laundry, suggesting that the contribution from industrial laundries may be overestimated.

Study Type Environmental

Industrial laundry wastewater has emerged as a significant source of microplastic (MP) pollution, yet limited research has comprehensively investigated its contribution. This study aimed to address this gap by evaluating MP contributions from industrial laundry and examining potential MP removal technologies. We focused on an industrial laundry in Sweden and its downstream wastewater treatment plant (WWTP), introducing two full-scale pilot filtration trials-Drum filtration and Ultrafiltration (UF)-to assess MP control performance. Wastewater samples were collected from the industrial laundry both before and after Drum and UF filtration, along with WWTP sludge samples. MP extraction involved a multi-step process of enzyme digestion, oxidation, and flotation, followed by MP analysis using Focal Plane Array-micro-Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FPA-μ-FTIR). Our findings confirmed that industrial laundering can be a major MP source, with polyester and smaller MPs being most prevalent. MP fragments, rather than fibers, were predominant across most samples. Both Drum and UF filters demonstrated high MP removal efficiencies of over 90 % by mass, suggesting that controlling MP source is feasible. However, a mass balance analysis revealed a substantial increase in MP contributions from the local town during both trials, which underscored that local town is another significant source of MPs.

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