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Fate of microplastics in a coastal wastewater treatment plant: Microfibers could partially break through the integrated membrane system

Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering 2021 54 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Ying Cai, Jun Wu, Jian Lü, Jian‐Hua Wang, Cui Zhang

Summary

Researchers tracked microplastics through an advanced membrane-based wastewater treatment system, finding that while it removed 98% of particles overall, small microfibers under 200 micrometers could still slip through reverse osmosis membranes and reach coastal waters.

Study Type Environmental

Rare information on the fate of microplastics in the integrated membrane system (IMS) system in full-scale wastewater treatment plant was available. The fate of microplastics in IMS in a coastal reclaimed water plant was investigated. The removal rate of microplastics in the IMS system reached 93.2% after membrane bioreactor (MBR) treatment while that further increased to 98.0% after the reverse osmosis (RO) membrane process. The flux of microplastics in MBR effluent was reduced from 1.5 × 10 MPs/d to 10.2 × 1011 MPs/d while that of the RO treatment decreased to 2.7 × 1011 MPs/d. Small scale fiber plastics (< 200 μm) could break through RO system according to the size distribution analysis. The application of the IMS system in the reclaimed water plant could prevent most of the microplastics from being discharged in the coastal water. These findings suggested that the IMS system was more efficient than conventional activated sludge system (CAS) for the removal of microplastics, while the discharge of small scale fiber plastics through the IMS system should also not be neglected because small scale fiber plastics (< 200 μm) could break through IMS system equipped with the RO system.

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