0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Technological Approaches for the Reduction of Microplastic Pollution in Seawater Desalination Plants and for Sea Salt Extraction

IntechOpen eBooks 2019 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Katrin Schuhen Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Adrian Frank Herbort, Adrian Frank Herbort, Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Michael Sturm, Michael Sturm, Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Michael Sturm, Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen Katrin Schuhen

Summary

This review examines technological approaches for reducing microplastic pollution in seawater, including filtration, coagulation, and biological degradation methods. It evaluates each technology's effectiveness, scalability, and cost, noting that no single solution is sufficient at global scale.

Study Type Environmental

An increasingly serious and widespread problem is the introduction of plastics into the water cycle. The poor degradability leads to the plastic waste remaining in water for a long time and over time it fragments into smaller and smaller plastic particles. Both the visible plastic parts and in particular their decomposition products and functionalized plastic particles are an enormous burden. Seawater desalination and sea salt extraction are highly dependent on the quality of the seawater in terms of process utilization and cost structures, i.e., on the level of pollution. Especially microparticles represent a significant potential for blocking the microfiltration membranes (pore size > 100 nm) in the pretreatment and the very costly reverse osmosis (RO) membranes (pore size > 5 nm). An innovative approach for the removal of microplastics from industrially used seawater combines a chemically induced agglomeration and a new technological implementation step. The particular challenge in removing the synthetic impurities is not only their small size but also their inert properties against most of the physical and chemical additives for flocculation. With an easy implementation to existing systems, an economic aspect and a strong impact on the maritime ecological balance will be expected.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper