We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Effect of coagulation on microfibers in laundry wastewater
Summary
Researchers tested ferric chloride and polyaluminium chloride (PACl) as coagulants for removing synthetic microfibers from laundry wastewater, finding that surfactants in detergent reduced removal efficiency from up to 96% to 0-37%. Adding PACl restored removal to above 90%, with optimal PACl concentrations dependent on detergent concentration, suggesting coagulant addition is critical for effective microfiber removal from laundry effluent.
Microplastics pollution in the aquatic system has received significant attention due to their recalcitrant nature and ecotoxicological threat. Municipal wastewater typically contains various microplastics with synthetic microfibers as a significant constituent from the laundry process. The fate of microfibers in conventional wastewater processes is not clearly understood. In this study, the effect of coagulation on microfibers obtained from a lint screen of a domestic dryer and resuspended in pure water, and also in laundry wastewater was investigated using ferric chloride and polyaluminum chloride (PACl). The removal efficiency of the microfibers resuspended in pure water varied from 86% to 96% depending on the fiber size ranges: < 90 μm, 90-125 μm, and >125 μm with the smaller size microfibers showing a lower removal efficiency. Surfactant present in detergent in laundry wastewater reduced the microfibers removal efficiency to 0-37%, however, the addition of PACl increased microfibers removal to 90%. The optimal PACl concentrations for ≥90% removal were 1.75, 2, 4, and 6 mg/L for 0.5, 2, 4, 8 mg/L detergent, respectively. Zeta potential, FTIR, and SEM analysis were applied to observe the surface changes of microfibers during coagulation indicating possible mechanisms of coagulation. The dominant mechanisms for coagulation of microfibers by FeCl and PACl seem to be charge neutralization and adsorption-bridging. This work provided some insights about the fate of laundry microfibers in primary treatment processes.
Sign in to start a discussion.
More Papers Like This
The influence of coagulation process conditions on theefficiency of microplastic removal in water treatment
Researchers investigated how coagulation process conditions — including coagulant type, pH, and microsand addition — affect the removal of polyethylene, PVC, and textile microfibers from river water, municipal wastewater, laundry effluent, and synthetic matrices. Ferric chloride and polyaluminum chloride both achieved substantial removal, with performance varying significantly by water matrix and microplastic type.
Identification, removal of microplastics and surfactants from laundry wastewater using electrocoagulation method
Laundry wastewater from a 2 kg synthetic fabric load released up to 114,300 microfibers per wash, and an electrocoagulation treatment removed roughly 98% of those fibers along with surfactants and organic load in about 25 minutes at a cost of US$0.53 per cubic meter. The results highlight both how significant laundry is as a microplastic source and that electrocoagulation is a cost-effective option for treating it before wastewater reaches natural waterways.
Researchon the removal of chemical oxygen demand and surfactants in commercial laundry wastewater by coagulation-flocculation process
Researchers investigated coagulation-flocculation treatment of commercial laundry wastewater, which contains significantly higher chemical oxygen demand (COD) and surfactant concentrations than domestic wastewater. Jar test experiments showed that poly aluminium chloride (PAC) at pH 7 and 60 mg/L dosage outperformed FeSO4·7H2O in reducing COD and surfactants to discharge standards.
Removal of Microfiber from Laundry Wastewater Using the Electrocoagulation Method
Researchers investigated microfiber release from laundry wastewater and found a reference load of 2.5 L of synthetic textiles released approximately 92,700-114,300 synthetic microfibers. Electrocoagulation treatment at neutral pH, 25-minute operating time, and 300 A/m² current density achieved 97.9% microfiber removal efficiency at a treatment cost of US$0.53/m³.
Removal of Microplastics from Laundry Wastewater Using Coagulation and Membrane Combination: A Laboratory-Scale Study
Researchers characterized microplastics in raw domestic laundry wastewater (9,000–11,000 particles/L, dominated by polyester fibers) and tested whether combining coagulation with ultrafiltration membrane filtration improved MP removal. The combined process significantly enhanced removal compared to coagulation alone, highlighting laundry wastewater as a major MP source amenable to treatment at scale.