Water Science and Technology (Jul 2021)

Particle balance and return loops for microplastics in a tertiary-level wastewater treatment plant

  • Pauliina Salmi,
  • Kalle Ryymin,
  • Anna K. Karjalainen,
  • Anna Mikola,
  • Emilia Uurasjärvi,
  • Julia Talvitie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2021.209
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 84, no. 1
pp. 89 – 100

Abstract

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Microplastics (MPs) from households, stormwater, and various industries are transported to wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), where a high proportion of them are captured before discharging their residuals to watersheds. Although recent studies have indicated that the removed MPs are mainly retained in wastewater sludge, sludge treatment processes have gained less attention in MP research than water streams at primary, secondary, and tertiary treatments. In this study, we sampled 12 different process steps in a tertiary-level municipal WWTP in central Finland. Our results showed that, compared to the plant influent load, three times more MPs circulated via reject water from the sludge centrifugation back to the beginning of the treatment process. Fibrous MPs were especially abundant in the dewatered sludge, whereas fragment-like MPs were observed in an aqueous stream. We concluded that, compared to the tertiary effluent, sludge treatment is the major exit route for MPs into the environment, but sludge treatment is also a return loop to the beginning of the process. Our sampling campaign also demonstrated that WWTPs with varying hydraulic conditions (such as the one studied here) benefit from disc filter-based tertiary treatments in MP removal. Highlights Dewatering by centrifugation was a step that removed a high number of MPs from the sludge.; Sludge retained especially the fibrous microplactics.; Reject water transported microplastics inside a wastewater treatment plant.; Disc filter-based tertiary treatment ensured removal of 99% of microplastics in wastewater.;

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