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Estimating Microplastics related to Laundry Wash and Personal Care Products released to Wastewater in Major Estonian Cities: a comparison of calculated and measured microplastics

Journal of Environmental Health Science and Engineering 2023 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ayankoya Yemi Ayankunle, Natalja Buhhalko, Karin Pachel, Erki Lember, Vallo Kõrgmaa, Arun Mishra, Kati Lind

Summary

Using substance flow analysis, Estonian researchers estimated that laundry washing and personal care products release between roughly 4 and 12 tonnes of microplastics per capita per year into the country's wastewater, with wastewater treatment plants retaining most but not all of these particles. The comparison of modeled and measured values helps validate monitoring frameworks and highlights laundry and personal care products as significant microplastic sources that need better management.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) research still at the budding stage in Estonia. A theoretical model build on substance flow analysis principles was developed. The goal of this study is to broaden understanding of MPs-types in wastewater and their contribution from known sources, quantify their presence based on model prediction and measurements. The authors estimate MPs from laundry wash (LW) and personal care products (PCPs)) in wastewater in Estonia. We found out that total estimated MPs load per capita from PCPs and LW in Estonia were between 4.25 - 12 tons/year, 3.52 - 11.24 tons / year respectively, and estimated load ended up in wastewater were between 700 - 30,000 kg/yr. and 2 - 1500 kg/yr. in WWTPs influent and effluent stream respectively. Finally. We conducted a comparison between estimated MPs load and on-site sample analysis and observed a medium-high level of MPs being discharged into the environment annually. During quantification and chemical characterization using µFTIR analysis, we found that microfibers with a length of 0.2-0.6 mm accounted for over 75% of the total MPs load in the effluent samples collected from four coastal WWTPs in Estonia. The estimation avails us broader overview about the theoretical MPs load in wastewater and gain valuable insight into developing process methods that prevent MPs accumulation in sewage sludge for safe application in agriculture.

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