4.5 Article

Removal of microplastics from wastewater through electrocoagulation-electroflotation and membrane filtration processes

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 7, Pages 1648-1662

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wst.2021.356

Keywords

electrocoagulation; electroflotation; fibers; membrane filtration; microplastic; wastewater treatment

Funding

  1. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK) [CAYDAG-116Y391]

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This study investigated the removal of microplastics (MPs) from wastewater using electrocoagulation-electroflotation (EC/En) and membrane filtration processes. The results showed that a 100% removal efficiency was achieved for both polymer types with the electrode combination of Al-Fe, initial pH of 7, current density of 20 A/m(2), and reaction time of 10 min. The membrane filtration method also displayed a 100% removal efficiency, outperforming conventional treatment methods.
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are one of the major vectors of microplastics (MPs) pollution for the recipient water bodies. Therefore, the recovery of MPs from WWTPs is extremely important for decreasing their accumulation and impact in aquatic systems. In this present study, the electrocoagulation-electroflotation (EC/En and membrane filtration processes were investigated in removing MPs from wastewaters. The effectiveness of different electrode combinations (Fe-Al and Al-Fe), current density (10-20 A/m(2)), pH (4.0-10.0) and operating times (0-120 min) on the removal of two different polymer particles in water were investigated to obtain maximum treatment efficiency. The effect of pressure (1-3 bar) on membrane filtration removal efficiency was also investigated. The maximum removal efficiencies were obtained as 100% for both polymer types with electrode combination of Al-Fe, initial pH of 7, current density of 20 A/m(2) and reaction time of 10 min. The membrane filtration method also displayed a 100% removal efficiency. In addition, these laboratory-scale results were compared with the one-year average data of a plant treating with real-scale membranes. The results indicated that the proposed processes were supplied maximum removal efficiency (100%) compared to conventional secondary and tertiary treatment methods (2-81.6%) in the removal of microplastics.

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