We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Microplastic retention in green walls for nature-based and decentralized greywater treatment
Summary
A pilot-scale living green wall — a vertical plant system — was used to treat household greywater and was shown to retain microplastics larger than 50 µm with good efficiency while also reducing chemical oxygen demand by around 80%. Green walls represent a nature-based decentralized treatment option that could help keep microplastics out of urban waterways, particularly in areas where centralized wastewater infrastructure is limited.
In wastewater treatment, two issues have recently received increased attention: nature-based solutions for addressing urban water stress through decentralized treatment and re-use; and emerging pollutants such as microplastics (MPs). At the interface of these, this study investigated living green walls for greywater treatment and their potential for MP removal. A large, pilot-scale green wall was irrigated with greywater (a mix of water collected from laundry, dishwasher, bathroom sinks, and synthetic greywater), and effluent from planted and unplanted sections was compared. MPs >50 μm were analyzed using μRaman spectroscopy and supplementary fluorescence microscopy imaging. The green wall proved efficient for the reduction of chemical oxygen demand (COD) (around 80%), removal of total suspended solids (TSS) (around 90%) and MPs, especially for MPs of the non-polar, hydrophobic polymer type polystyrene and MPs sized 100–500 μm. MP removal was improved in the planted (50–60%) compared to the unplanted section (20%), especially for the size fraction 100–500 μm. Physical filtration by the green wall growing media (a mix of perlite with a grain size of 1–5 mm, and coconut fiber), which was further enhanced by plant roots decreasing the effective pore size, can be considered the most important removal mechanism. Charge-mediated adsorption cannot be expected as MPs and growing media mix were both negatively charged at the prevailing water pH (7–8). Fluorescence imaging for MP analysis, using a merged UV/blue light fluorograph, overestimated MP concentrations in greywater (hundreds of MPs per sample were identified by fluorescence imaging versus tens of MPs by μRaman spectroscopy) and would benefit from further improvement before it can be reliably applied as a cheaper and faster alternative methodology for MP analysis. • Efficient microplastic (MP) removal from greywater in a vertical living green wall. • Physical filtration main MP retention mechanism. • Plant roots improve MP retention. • Higher retention for non-polar hydrophobic polymer types PS, PP, PE. • No charge-mediated adsorption of MPs in perlite and coconut coir green wall medium.
Sign in to start a discussion.