Microplastics in wastewater and sludge from centralized and decentralized wastewater treatment plants: Effects of treatment systems and microplastic characteristics

Domestic wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) play a vital role in limiting the release of microplastics (MP) into the environment. This study examined MP removal efficiency from five centralized and four decentralized domestic WWTPs in Bangkok, Thailand. MP concentrations in wastewater and sludge we...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2024-08, Vol.361, p.142536, Article 142536
Hauptverfasser: Maw, Me Me, Boontanon, Narin, Aung, Humm Kham Zan Zan, Jindal, Ranjna, Fujii, Shigeo, Visvanathan, Chettiyappan, Boontanon, Suwanna Kitpati
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Domestic wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) play a vital role in limiting the release of microplastics (MP) into the environment. This study examined MP removal efficiency from five centralized and four decentralized domestic WWTPs in Bangkok, Thailand. MP concentrations in wastewater and sludge were comparable between centralized and decentralized WWTPs, despite these decentralized WWTPs serving smaller populations and having limited treatment capacity. The elimination of MPs ranged from 50 to 96.8% in centralized WWTPs and 14.2–53.6% in decentralized WWTPs. It is noted that the retained MPs concentrations in sludge ranged from 20,000 to 228,100 MP/kg dry weight. The prevalence of synthetic fibers and fragments could be attributed to their pathways from laundry or car tires, and the accidental release of a variety of plastic wastes ended up in investigated domestic WWTPs. Removal of MPs between the centralized and decentralized WWTPs was influenced by several impact factors including initial MP concentrations, longer retention times, MP fragmentation, and variations of MP concentrations in sludge leading to different activated sludge process configurations. Sewage sludge has become a primary location for the accumulation of incoming microplastics in WWTPs. The MPs entering and leaving each unit process were varied due to the unique characteristics of MPs, and their different treatment efficiencies. While the extended hydraulic retention period in decentralized WWTPs decreased the MP removal efficacy, the centralized WWTP with the two-stage activated sludge process achieved the highest MP removal efficiency. [Display omitted] •Centralized wastewater treatment plants achieved microplastic removal of 50–96.8%.•In the decentralized systems, microplastic removal efficiencies ranged 14.2–53.6%.•Centralized system with two-stage activated sludge gained highest removal efficacy.•Long retention reduced removal ability in decentralized plants due to fragmentation.•Sedimentation and accumulation mechanisms influence microplastic removal in sludge.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.142536