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Is the petrochemical industry an overlooked critical source of environmental microplastics?
Summary
Researchers found that a petrochemical wastewater treatment plant is a significant but overlooked source of environmental microplastics, with high abundances detected in influent, effluent, and sludge, suggesting the petrochemical industry warrants greater scrutiny.
Microplastics (MPs) are ubiquitous in the environment and have been verified to be harmful to organisms. The petrochemical industry is a possible contributor, for it is the primary plastic producer but is not focused on. In this background, MPs in the influent, effluent, activated sludge, and expatriate sludge of a typical petrochemical wastewater treatment plant (PWWTP) were identified by the laser infrared imaging spectrometer (LDIR). It revealed that the abundances of MPs in the influent and effluent were as high as 10310 and 1280 items/L with a removal efficiency of 87.6%. The removed MPs accumulated in the sludge, and the MP abundances in activated and expatriate sludge reached 4328 and 10767 items/g, respectively. It is estimated that 1440,000 billion MPs might be released into the environment by the petrochemical industry in 2021 globally. For the specific PWWTP, 25 types of MPs were identified, among which Polypropylene (PP), Polyethylene (PE), and Silicone resin were dominant. All of the detected MPs were smaller than 350 µm, and those smaller than 100 µm prevailed. As for the shape, the fragment was dominant. The study confirmed the critical status of the petrochemical industry in releasing MPs for the first time.
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