4.7 Article

An audit of microplastic abundance throughout three Australian wastewater treatment plants

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 263, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128294

Keywords

Biosolids; Fibres; Landfill; Removal efficiency; Screenings; Wastewater effluent

Funding

  1. Water Corporation (WC) [D-S00674]

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Wastewater treatment plants are important pathways for microplastics to enter the environment, with the majority of microplastics retained in sludge. Limited information on microplastics in Australian sludge and biosolids warrants further research. This study shows that most microplastics are intercepted and transported to landfills during the treatment process, making landfills potential important sinks (and future sources) of microplastics.
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) have been identified as an important pathway of microplastics to the environment. Most studies have focused onwastewater effluent, but generally only a small fraction of microplastics entering WWTPs are present in treated effluent. Instead, the majority of microplastics are expected to be retained in the sludge. To our knowledge, there is limited information on microplastics in sludge/biosolids from Australian WWTPs, despite 75% of biosolids produced in Australia being used for agriculture. This study evaluated the abundance of microplastics throughout the treatment trains of three WWTPs in Australia. The fate of microplastics >25 mm during treatment and their release to the environment was evaluated using an audit approach. The highest microplastic concentrations were detected in the influent, with fibres the dominant form of microplastic found. The screening and grit removal process preceding primary treatment removed 69-79% of microplastics, with these microplastics transported to landfill. Only 0.2-1.8% of the total microplastics in the influent were present in the final effluent, while 8-16% were retained in biosolids. This equates to between 22.1 x 10(6) to 133 x 10(6) microplastic particles per day released in effluent, between 864 x 10(6) to 1020 x 10(6) microplastic particles per day in biosolids, and between 4100 x 10(6) to 9100 x 10(6) microplastic particles per day transported to landfill. This study shows for the first time that most microplastics are retained during the initial screening and grit removal process with the load of microplastics going to landfill an order of magnitude greater than that in biosolids. Landfills may thus be an important sink (and potential future source) of microplastics from wastewater. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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