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Microplastics in municipal wastewater treatment plants: a case study of Denizli/Turkey

Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering 2023 41 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Pelin Koyuncuoğlu, Gülbin Erden

Summary

"A case study of a municipal wastewater treatment plant in Denizli, Turkey, found that despite achieving over 95% microplastic removal efficiency, the facility still discharged approximately 12.8 billion microplastic particles per day into the receiving environment, with fibers as the dominant shape. This underscores that even high-performing WWTPs are significant point sources of microplastic pollution and that current treatment technology alone cannot protect aquatic ecosystems."

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Plastic particles smaller than 5 mm are microplastics. They are among the significant pollutants that recently attracted attention. Great quantities of microplastics enter the sewage system daily and reach wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). As a result, WWTPs are potential microplastic sources. Hence, they create a pathway for microplastics to reach aquatic environments with treated wastewater discharge. Studies on microplastic characterization in WWTPs have gained momentum in academia. This study investigates the abundance, size, shape, color, polymer type, and removal efficiencies of microplastics in a municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Denizli/Turkey. The results showed that the dominant microplastic shape in wastewater samples was fibers (41.78%–60.77%) in the 100–500 µm (58.57%–80.07%) size range. Most of the microplastics were transparent-white (32.86%–58.93%). The dominant polymer types were polyethylene (54.05%) and polyethylene vinyl acetate (37.84%) in raw wastewater. Furthermore, the microplastic removal efficiencies of the Denizli Central WWTP as a whole and for individual treatment units were evaluated. Although the microplastic pollution removal efficiency of the Denizli Central WWTP was over 95%, the microplastic concentration discharged daily into the receiving environment was considerably high (1.28 × 1010 MP/d). Thus, Denizli Central WWTP effluents result in a high volume of emissions in terms of microplastic pollution with a significant daily discharge to the Çürüksu Stream.

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