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Wastewater Hydroponics for Pollutant Removal and Food Production: Principles, Progress and Future Outlook

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15142614

Keywords

food crops; hydroponics; phytoremediation; pollutant removal; wastewater purification

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As the global population reaches eight billion, efficient and environmentally friendly methods are needed to treat large quantities of wastewater. Wastewater hydroponics technology (HP) has proven to be effective in removing various pollutants, but it still has drawbacks such as high energy consumption and low public acceptance. Further research should focus on reducing energy consumption and developing hybrid technologies for nutrient recycling.
As the global population reaches eight billion, large quantities of wastewater (domestic, industrial, livestock) need to be treated in an efficient, green, and environmentally friendly manner. Wastewater hydroponics technology (HP) can efficiently remove various pollutants (conventional and emerging pollutants, heavy metals, and microorganisms) and create economic benefits. This paper aims to systematically review the principles, applications, and limitations of wastewater hydroponics technology in the context of pollution and nutrient removal. Unlike constructed wetlands, wastewater hydroponics has been proven to be effective in removing pollutants through small-scale in situ restoration. For instance, the average removal of COD, total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), copper (Cu), and zinc (Zn) was more than 70%, 60%, 80%, 64.2%, and 49.5%, respectively. However, HP technology still has the disadvantages of high energy consumption, complex control parameters, and low public acceptance of using wastewater for planting crops. Therefore, further research is needed to reduce system energy consumption. In addition, hybrid technologies, such as two-stage hydroponics that use aquatic plants (algae or aquatic floating weeds) to recycle pollutant-containing wastewater nutrients for hydroponics, should be further developed.

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