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Research progress on microplastics in wastewater treatment plants: A holistic review
Summary
This review provides a holistic assessment of microplastics in wastewater treatment plants, covering sampling methods, occurrence patterns across treatment stages, removal efficiencies, and the environmental risks posed by microplastic discharge through effluent and sludge.
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) discharge metric tons of microplastics (MPs) daily to aquatic and terrestrial environments worldwide. Herein we provide a holistic review on MPs in the WWTPs, highlighting recent advances in sampling and analysis, improved understanding of their sources, occurrence, and degradation in treatment steps, and the potential risks MPs pose after being discharged in treated effluent and sludge. We discuss the merits and limitations of the various sampling and analytical approaches to determine MPs in major WWTP compartments; highlight new research on MP profiles (abundance, physical characteristics, and compositions) in raw sewage, treated effluent, and waste sludge, which are of particular interest when assessing MP sources, removal rates, and fate; and emphasize mechanisms of MP fragmentation and degradation within WWTPs as well as the potential sorption of wastewater contaminants to the MPs. We find that robust and standardized methods for determining MPs in WWTP samples is still urgently needed, and that complete removal of MPs from wastewater by WWTPs is not guaranteed, although the vast majority of MPs end up in sludge. Areas of research that deserve further attention include the fate of small (<20 μm) MPs, abiotic and biotic fragmentation of MPs in the WWTPs, and more empirical data with concentrations on a mass basis.
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