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Microplastics in sewage sludge destined to anaerobic digestion: The potential role of thermal pretreatment

Chemosphere 2022 27 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.
Alessandra Cesaro Alessandra Cesaro Francesco Pirozzi, Alessandra Cesaro Francesco Pirozzi, Antigoni Zafırakou, Antigoni Zafırakou, Akrivi Alexandraki, Akrivi Alexandraki, Akrivi Alexandraki, Akrivi Alexandraki, Francesco Pirozzi, Alessandra Cesaro

Summary

Researchers found that thermal pretreatment of sewage sludge at 120°C did not degrade conventional PET microplastics but did alter biodegradable microplastics, which also boosted methane production during anaerobic digestion, raising concerns about how different microplastic types behave in sludge treatment.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) are plastic particles with size smaller than 5 mm: their removal in municipal wastewater treatment plants mostly results in the accumulation of the coarser fraction into the sludge. The common application of the treated sludge as soil amendment raises the issue of the uncontrolled release of MPs into the environment, which depicts the need to identify suitable counteraction strategies. This work briefly reviews the most recent studies that focus on the fate of MPs during conventional sludge treatments, and, based on the results of this analysis, proposes the thermal pretreatment (120 °C, 30 min) of waste activated sludge (WAS) containing different kinds of MPs, in order to investigate its effect on the anaerobic biodegradability as well as on the abundance and physical features of MPs. Experimental results show that high temperatures did not alter polyethylene terephthalate (PET) MPs but the biodegradable-compostable ones (BIO-MPs), complying with the UNI EN 13432 standards. The profile of methane generation from thermally pretreated samples containing PET-MPs do not indicate any inhibition of the anaerobic process, which was positively influenced by the BIO-MPs in WAS: a 100% and 25% methane increase was observed over the control samples with and without the thermal pretreatment, respectively. Further studies are needed to better understand the mechanisms underlying biodegradable MPs behavior as well as to investigate the influence of high temperature treatments on smaller size MPs during anaerobic processes.

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