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The removal of microplastics in the wastewater treatment process and their potential impact on anaerobic digestion due to pollutants association

Chemosphere 2020 232 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xiaolei Zhang, Xiaolei Zhang, Jiaxin Chen Jiaxin Chen Ji Li, Xiaolei Zhang, Jiaxin Chen Jiaxin Chen Xiaolei Zhang, Jiaxin Chen

Summary

A review of microplastics in wastewater treatment found that while treatment processes transfer most microplastics from water into sludge, this concentrated plastic material then carries adsorbed pollutants like antibiotics and heavy metals into anaerobic digestion systems. The desorption behavior of these toxic compounds from microplastics under digestion conditions is identified as a key determinant of whether sludge treatment remains effective and safe.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are abundant in municipal wastewater which is mainly from personal care products and laundry. In recent years, great attention has been given to microplastics removal in wastewater treatment. In this article, the study focusing on microplastics in wastewater has been evaluated with VOSviewer. It was found that the major interest was in identification, quantification and pollution of the microplastics in the wastewater, and their transportation and final destination during wastewater treatment processes. The major microplastics and their shapes in wastewater were reviewed. Our evaluation results were consistent with other reported that fibers and fragment were the majority in terms of shape and polyethylene terephthalare (PET), polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and polystyrene (PS) are the most presented microplastics in wastewater. During wastewater treatment, the removal route of microplastics from wastewater includes settling, adsorption, entrapment, interception, etc. It confirms that microplastics are just simply transferred from wastewater to sludge. It could then bring problems to anaerobic digestion as microplastics are great vector for toxic substances such as antibiotics and persistence organic pollutants. The key to determine the microplastics effect on anaerobic digestion is the desorption behavior of the toxic substances such as antibiotics, persistent organic pollutants and heavy metals from microplastics in digestion condition. Toxic compounds which are commonly presenting in sludge have shown the tendency to release from microplastics. It indicates that microplastics in sludge have great possibility to impact on methane production.

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