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Efficiency of lagoon-based municipal wastewater treatment in removing microplastics

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 25 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Linhua Fan, Arash Mohseni, Jonathan Schmidt, Ben Evans, Ben Murdoch, Li Gao

Summary

A two-year study of lagoon-based wastewater treatment systems in Victoria, Australia found that both a conventional lagoon system and an activated sludge-lagoon hybrid removed the majority of incoming microplastics, but both also released microplastics into effluent, confirming wastewater plants as both sinks and sources of environmental microplastic contamination.

Study Type Environmental

Municipal wastewater treatment plants act as a sink, but also are a source of microplastics in the environment. A conventional wastewater lagoon system and an activated sludge (AS)-lagoon system in Victoria (Australia) were investigated through a two-year sampling program to understand the fate and transport of MP in such treatment processes. The abundance (>25 μm) and characteristics (size, shape, and colour) of the microplastics present in the various wastewater streams were determined. The mean values of MP in the influent of the two plants were 55.3 ± 38.4 and 42.5 ± 20.1 MP/L, respectively. The dominant MP size of influent and final effluent was <500 μm, with 25-200 μm accounting for >65 % of the total MP; synthetic fibres were the dominant MP in all wastewater streams. Influent MP concentration was significantly higher in summer than in other seasons for both systems, which was related to the lower plant inflow due to less stormwater entering the sewer during summer. The promising MP removal capability of the lagoon system (97 %) was attributed to its lengthy wastewater detention time (total HRT >250 days, including the storage lagoons) that would allow effective separation of MP from the water column via various physical and biological pathways. For the AS-lagoon system, the high MP reduction efficiency (98.4 %) was attributed to the post-secondary treatment of the wastewater with the lagoon system, in which MP was further removed during the month-long detention in the lagoons. The results indicated the potential of such low-energy and low-cost wastewater treatment systems for MP control.

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