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Identification of microplastics in raw and treated municipal solid waste landfill leachates in Hong Kong, China

Chemosphere 2024 30 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zi‐Hao Qin, Sunita Varjani Carol Sze Ki Lin, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Muhammad Ahmar Siddiqui, Zi‐Hao Qin, Muhammad Ahmar Siddiqui, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Sunita Varjani Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Sunita Varjani Xiaying Xin, Jin‐Hua Mou, Carol Sze Ki Lin, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Sunita Varjani Jin‐Hua Mou, Sunita Varjani Sunita Varjani Sunita Varjani Sunita Varjani Guanghao Chen, Guanghao Chen, Sunita Varjani Guanghao Chen, Carol Sze Ki Lin, Carol Sze Ki Lin, Carol Sze Ki Lin, Sunita Varjani Sunita Varjani Carol Sze Ki Lin, Sunita Varjani Sunita Varjani

Summary

Researchers conducted the first study of microplastic contamination in landfill leachate from Hong Kong's major waste facilities. They found microplastics present in both raw and treated leachate, with conventional treatment methods only partially removing them, suggesting that landfills may be an underappreciated pathway for microplastics entering the environment.

Polymers

Plastics are indispensable in modern society but also pose a persistent threat to the environment. In particular, microplastics (MPs) have a substantial environmental impact on ecosystems. Municipal solid waste landfill leachates are a source of MPs, but leakage of MPs from leachates has only been reported in a few studies. As a modern city, Hong Kong has a remarkably high population density and a massive plastic waste generation. However, it depends on conventional landfilling for plastic waste management and traditional thermal ammonia stripping for leachate treatment. Yet, the MP leakage from landfill leachates in Hong Kong has not been disclosed. This is the first study that aimed to identify, quantify, and characterise MPs in raw and treated leachates, respectively, from major landfill sites in Hong Kong. The concentrations of MPs varied from 49.0 ± 24.3 to 507.6 ± 37.3 items/L among the raw leachate samples, and a potential correlation was found between the concentration of MPs in the raw leachate sample from a given landfill site and the annual leachate generation of the site. Most MPs were 100-500 μm fragments or filaments and were transparent or yellow. Regarding the polymeric materials among the identified MPs, poly(ethylene terephthalate) and polyethylene were the most abundant types, comprising 45.30% and 21.37% of MPs, respectively. Interestingly, leachates treated by ammonia stripping contained higher concentrations of MPs than raw leachate samples, which demonstrated that the traditional treatment process may not be sufficient regarding the removal of emerging pollutants, such as MPs. Overall, our findings provide a more comprehensive picture of the pollution of MPs in landfill leachates in Hong Kong and highlight the urgent need for adopting the consideration of MPs into the conventional mindset of waste management systems in Hong Kong.

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