Transport and fate of microplastic particles in wastewater treatment plants.

Water Res
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

Municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are frequently suspected as significant point sources or conduits of microplastics to the environment. To directly investigate these suspicions, effluent discharges from seven tertiary plants and one secondary plant in Southern California were studied. The study also looked at influent loads, particle size/type, conveyance, and removal at these wastewater treatment facilities. Over 0.189 million liters of effluent at each of the seven tertiary plants were filtered using an assembled stack of sieves with mesh sizes between 400 and 45 Î¼m. Additionally, the surface of 28.4 million liters of final effluent at three tertiary plants was skimmed using a 125 Î¼m filtering assembly. The results suggest that tertiary effluent is not a significant source of microplastics and that these plastic pollutants are effectively removed during the skimming and settling treatment processes. However, at a downstream secondary plant, an average of one micro-particle in every 1.14 thousand liters of final effluent was counted. The majority of microplastics identified in this study had a profile (color, shape, and size) similar to the blue polyethylene particles present in toothpaste formulations. Existing treatment processes were determined to be very effective for removal of microplastic contaminants entering typical municipal WWTPs.

Year of Publication
2016
Journal
Water Res
Volume
91
Pages
174-82
Date Published
2016 Mar 15
ISSN
1879-2448
DOI
10.1016/j.watres.2016.01.002
PubMed ID
26795302
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