Ignored microplastic sources from plastic bottle recycling

The recovery and recycling of plastic products has increased dramatically in recent years as a strategy to achieve sustainable production and minimization of plastic pollution. However, the release of microplastics during plastic recycling has received little attention. We evaluated the generation a...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2022-09, Vol.838 (Pt 2), p.156038-156038, Article 156038
Hauptverfasser: Guo, Yuwen, Xia, Xinyue, Ruan, Jiuli, Wang, Yibo, Zhang, Jinyu, LeBlanc, Gerald A., An, Lihui
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container_end_page 156038
container_issue Pt 2
container_start_page 156038
container_title The Science of the total environment
container_volume 838
creator Guo, Yuwen
Xia, Xinyue
Ruan, Jiuli
Wang, Yibo
Zhang, Jinyu
LeBlanc, Gerald A.
An, Lihui
description The recovery and recycling of plastic products has increased dramatically in recent years as a strategy to achieve sustainable production and minimization of plastic pollution. However, the release of microplastics during plastic recycling has received little attention. We evaluated the generation and fate of microplastics in three typical facilities which make polyethylene terephthalate (PET) flakes using post-consumer PET bottles as raw material. Microplastics, 0.1– 5.0 mm in size, were detected in production wastewater at concentrations ranging from 23.43 ± 1.04 mg/L to 1836.37 ± 31.73 mg/L, while decreased to (8.13 ± 0.42–83.83 ± 0.93) mg/L in discharge effluent and (52,166 ± 2858–68,866 ± 2500) μg/g in sludge. Interestingly, the profiles of microplastics in samples from production wastewater, effluents, and sludge showed significant differences. Although, in all three compartments, the mass of microplastics increased, and the particle number decreased with increasing particle size. Overall, the removal ratio of total microplastics from the production wastewater was 53.47 ± 4.48% to 99.56 ± 0.02% in mass, and from 90.08 ± 0.82% to 99.56 ± 0.05% in quantity. The loss of microplastics from wastewater resulted in their concentration in sludge. Factors that influence the transfer of microplastics from wastewater to sludge should be identified and utilized to maintain a high level of removal and prevent leakage of these particles into the environment. [Display omitted] •The recycling of PET bottles generated microplastics.•The majority of microplastics in wastewater were deposited into sludge.•The removal rates of microplastic particles depended on the microparticle size.•Measures are needed to control microplastics during plastic waste recycling.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156038
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However, the release of microplastics during plastic recycling has received little attention. We evaluated the generation and fate of microplastics in three typical facilities which make polyethylene terephthalate (PET) flakes using post-consumer PET bottles as raw material. Microplastics, 0.1– 5.0 mm in size, were detected in production wastewater at concentrations ranging from 23.43 ± 1.04 mg/L to 1836.37 ± 31.73 mg/L, while decreased to (8.13 ± 0.42–83.83 ± 0.93) mg/L in discharge effluent and (52,166 ± 2858–68,866 ± 2500) μg/g in sludge. Interestingly, the profiles of microplastics in samples from production wastewater, effluents, and sludge showed significant differences. Although, in all three compartments, the mass of microplastics increased, and the particle number decreased with increasing particle size. 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subjects Microplastics
PET flake
Post-consumer PET bottles
Recycling
Wet crush
title Ignored microplastic sources from plastic bottle recycling
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