Water Cycle (Jan 2024)

A sustainable green solution to domestic sewage pollution: Optimizing floating wetland treatment with different plant combinations and growth media

  • D. Arivukkarasu,
  • R. Sathyanathan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 185 – 198

Abstract

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Water quality degradation poses a global threat, with surface water resources bearing the brunt of pollution from various sources, including inadequately treated wastewater discharged from industrial and commercial processes. This discharge introduces a wide range of pollutants, compromising surface water quality and potentially contaminating groundwater. Floating Wetland Treatment (FWT) systems, particularly utilizing affordable and easy-to-construct bamboo rafts, emerge as a promising eco-technology offering a sustainable solution for rehabilitating water bodies polluted with inadequately treated domestic sewage. Research exploring the combined remediation potential of different plant combinations remains limited, although several studies demonstrate the efficacy of individual plant species in FWT systems. This study addresses this gap by evaluating the effectiveness of three terrestrial plant combinations (Canna indica, Chrysopogon zizanioides, and Hibiscus rosa-sinensis) supported by bamboo rafts in treating domestic wastewater. Among FWT methods, systems utilizing bamboo as floating rafts stand out due to their affordability, ease of construction, and adaptability to diverse plant species. FWT systems were meticulously designed with three plant combinations, utilizing soil and coco peat as growth media. Different FWT systems exhibited variations in their ability to remove several key water quality indicators. These variations were influenced by operational conditions, system design, plant selection, and growth media. Notably, the peat-based FWT system (FWT-BPCV) combining Canna indica and Chrysopogon zizanioides consistently demonstrated outstanding performance in reducing various pollutants, including total nitrogen (78.9 %), ammonia (90.2 %), total phosphorus (86.9 %), COD (92.8 %), BOD5 (94.8 %), TDS (70.7 %), TSS (93.6 %), turbidity (93.3 %), phosphate (73.2 %), electrical conductivity (62.5 %), and E. coli (78 %). This research suggests that FWT-BPCV is an eco-friendly wastewater treatment solution and an effective option for domestic wastewater treatment practices.

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