We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Novel Quantitative Evaluation of Biotreatment Suitability of Wastewater
Summary
This study developed a new framework for evaluating how suitable wastewater is for biological treatment, going beyond standard water quality indicators. Better assessment tools could improve wastewater treatment efficiency and reduce pollutant discharges, including microplastics.
The development of wastewater treatment industry has gradually entered the high-standard period and the wastewater treatment technology needs to be refined for different types of wastewater. Traditional water quality indicators are not able to explain new problems encountered in the current wastewater treatment process, especially the potential of removing pollutants via biological methods. This research proposed a new method of evaluating the biological treatment process by measuring the oxygen consumption in the biodegradation of pollutants on-the-go and describing the complete biological oxygen consumption process. The biodegradability of wastewater from an actual textile wastewater treatment plant was quantitatively evaluated by analyzing the proportion of different organic pollutions. Results showed that the hydrolytic acidification can improve the biodegradability of textile wastewater by increasing the content of biodegradable organic matter (growth of 86.4%), and air flotation has little effect on the biodegradability of the wastewater. Moreover, the biodegradability of the textile wastewater could be improved by increasing the nitrogen and phosphorus content, which could come from urea and K2HPO4. Concretely, nitrogen source mainly increases organic matter of rapid bio-treated and organic matter of easy bio-treated by 14.94% and 70.79%, and phosphorus source mainly increases the organic matter of easy bio-treated by 143.75%. We found that the optimum concentration of additional N and P to the textile wastewater was 35 mg/L and 45 mg/L, respectively. This approach holds great application prospects such as risk control, optimizing treatment technology, and management, due to its characteristics of being simple, easy to use, and rapid online implement action.
Sign in to start a discussion.
More Papers Like This
Method development for microplastic analysis in wastewater
This book chapter describes methods developed to detect and measure microplastics in wastewater samples, addressing the lack of standardized analytical protocols. Reliable detection methods are essential because wastewater treatment plants are a major pathway through which land-based microplastics enter aquatic environments.
Effectiveness of conventional municipal wastewater treatment plants in microplastics removal: Insights from multiple analytical techniques
Researchers evaluated the effectiveness of conventional municipal wastewater treatment plants in removing microplastics across multiple treatment stages, finding removal efficiencies of 70–90% but documenting that billions of particles still pass through in final effluent daily.
Evaluation of the Presence of Microplastics in Wastewater Treatment Plants: Development and Verification of Strategies for Their Quantification and Removal in Aqueous Streams
Researchers evaluated microplastic presence in wastewater treatment plants and developed a pilot capture system capable of detecting, quantifying, and removing microplastic particles from water. The study found that conventional treatment processes are insufficient for complete microplastic removal, highlighting the need for dedicated technologies to address this gap in water treatment infrastructure.
A multidimensional study of wastewater treatment
This review covers the full range of wastewater treatment approaches, from physical and chemical methods to biological and membrane-based technologies. The paper summarizes how different contaminant types — including microplastics — are handled by various treatment systems. It serves as a broad reference for understanding current wastewater management capabilities and limitations.
Validation of Sample Preparation Methods for Microplastic Analysis in Wastewater Matrices—Reproducibility and Standardization
Sample preparation methods for microplastic analysis in wastewater were validated against reference standards to assess recovery rates and reproducibility. The validation study identified methods that reliably extract microplastics from complex wastewater matrices, supporting more consistent environmental monitoring of microplastic discharge from treatment plants.