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 Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Removing Plastic Waste from Rivers: A Prototype-Scale Experimental Study on a Novel River-Cleaning Concept

Water 2024 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yannic Fuchs, Susanne Scherbaum, Richard Huber, Nils Rüther, Arnd Hartlieb

Summary

Researchers tested a prototype-scale river-cleaning system designed to capture plastic waste across the full width and depth of a river. The study demonstrated that the novel approach can effectively intercept floating and submerged plastic debris, addressing the critical role that rivers play as transport pathways carrying mismanaged plastic waste from land to oceans.

Study Type Environmental

Mismanaged plastic waste threatens the sustainable development goals of the United Nations in social, economic, and ecological dimensions. In the pollution process, fluvial systems are critical transport paths for mismanaged plastic waste, connecting land areas with oceans and acting as plastic reservoirs and accumulation zones. The complex fluid–plastic particle interaction leads to a strong distribution of transported particles over the entire river width and flow depth. Therefore, a holistic plastic removal approach must consider lateral and vertical river dimensions. This study investigates the conceptual design of a comprehensive river-cleaning system that enables the removal of both floating and suspended litter particles from watercourses withstanding flow variations. The innovative technical cleaning infrastructure is based on a self-cleaning system using rotating screen drum units. In 42 prototype-scale experiments using ten representative plastic particle types (both 3D items and fragments) of five different polymer types, we prove the self-cleaning concept of the infrastructure and define its parameters for the best cleaning performance. Its cleaning efficiency is strongly dependent on the polymer type and shape. The overall cleaning efficiency for 3D items amounts to 82%, whereas plastic fragments are removed less efficiently depending on hydraulic conditions. Adaptions to the prototype can enhance its efficiency.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Green barriers to plastic transport in rivers: an indoor study

Indoor flume experiments demonstrated that riparian vegetation and green infrastructure along riverbanks can trap floating and suspended plastic debris, suggesting that natural and planted green barriers could help reduce plastic transport to the ocean.

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

Prototipo automático para la recolección de residuos flotantes y limpieza de un río utilizando una cinta transportadora

This engineering project describes the design and development of a robotic floating waste collector for the Bogotá and Magdalena rivers in Colombia, using a conveyor belt system to remove solid waste from the water surface. While the robot targets plastic and solid waste collection, the paper does not directly address microplastic research.

Article Tier 2

Capture of plastic litter by sluice gate and trash racks

Researchers conducted hydraulic flume experiments to assess how well sluice gates and trash racks capture plastic litter of varying shapes and sizes, finding that each structure has a threshold particle size above which capture efficiency becomes reliable. The results suggest these water management devices can be optimised for plastic removal, offering a practical intervention point for reducing plastic transport through river systems.

Article Tier 2

Sustainable Microplastic Filter Development for River Conservation: A Case Study in Yogyakarta

Researchers developed a sustainable microplastic filter for protecting freshwater river environments, testing a pilot-scale filtration system in a real river setting. The filter reduced downstream microplastic concentrations and was designed for low-cost, low-maintenance deployment.

Share this paper