4.5 Review

Are Wetlands as an Integrated Bioremediation System Applicable for the Treatment of Wastewater from Underground Coal Gasification Processes?

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en15124419

Keywords

wetlands; bioremediation; bacteria; underground coal gasification (UCG); industrial wastewater

Categories

Funding

  1. UCGWATERplus project entitled: Coal-and bio-based water remediation strategies for underground coal gasification and beyond
  2. EU Research Fund for Coal and Steel [101033964]
  3. Polish Ministry of Education and Science [5198/FBWiS/2021/2, 5211/FBWiS/2021/2]

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Underground coal gasification (UCG) is a clean coal technology, but it carries environmental risks. This review focuses on wetlands systems as a bioremediation method for treating UCG wastewater and provides examples and operating principles.
Underground coal gasification (UCG) can be considered as one of the clean coal technologies. During the process, the gas of industrial value is produced, which can be used to produce heat and electricity, liquid fuels or can replace natural gas in chemistry. However, UCG does carry some environmental risks, mainly related to potential negative impacts on surface and groundwater. Wastewater and sludge from UCG contain significant amounts of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons, phenols, ammonia, cyanides and hazardous metals such as arsenic. This complicated matrix containing high concentrations of hazardous pollutants is similar to wastewater from the coke industry and, similarly to them, requires complex mechanical, chemical and biological treatment. The focus of the review is to explain how the wetlands systems, described as one of bioremediation methods, work and whether these systems are suitable for removing organic and inorganic contaminants from heavily contaminated industrial wastewater, of which underground coal gasification wastewater is a particularly challenging example. Wetlands appear to be suitable systems for the treatment of UCG wastewater and can provide the benefits of nature-based solutions. This review explains the principles of constructed wetlands (CWs) and provides examples of industrial wastewater treated by various wetland systems along with their operating principles. In addition, the physicochemical characteristics of the wastewater from different coal gasifications under various conditions, obtained from UCG's own experiments, are presented.

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