4.7 Article

From pollutant removal to resource recovery: A bibliometric analysis of municipal wastewater research in Europe

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 284, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.131267

Keywords

Municipal wastewater; Micropollutant; Bibliometric analysis; Europe; Resource recovery; Circular economy

Funding

  1. Water Informatics Science and Engineering (WISE) Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) - UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/L016214/1]
  2. Royal Academy of Engineering [RF_201718_17145]

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This study provides a comprehensive summary of municipal wastewater research in Europe in the 2010s, revealing Spain as the highest producer of publications, Switzerland having the highest average citations per publication, and China being the most collaborative country from outside of Europe. The research also highlights a paradigm shift in focus from pollutant removal to resource recovery and circular economy in European municipal wastewater research.
Municipal wastewaters are abundant low-strength streams that require adequate treatment and disposal to ensure public and environmental health. This study aims to provide a comprehensive summary of municipal wastewater research in Europe in the 2010s in the form of bibliometric analysis. The work was based on the Science Citation Index Expanded (Web of Science) and carried out using the R-package bibliometrix for bibliometric data analysis and the software VOSviewer for science mapping. Analysing a dataset of 5645 publications, we identified the most influential journals, countries, authors, institutions, and publications, and mapped the co-authorship and keyword co-occurrence networks. Spain had produced the most publications while Switzerland had the highest average citations per publication. China was the most collaborative country from outside of Europe. Analysis of the most cited articles revealed the popularity of micropollutant removal in European municipal wastewater research. The keyword analysis visualized a paradigm shift from pollutant removal towards resource recovery and circular economy. We found that current challenges of resource recovery from municipal wastewater come from both technical and non-technical (e.g., environmental, economic, and social) aspects. We also discussed future research opportunities that can tackle these challenges.

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