4.7 Article

Fate and effects of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) microplastics during anaerobic digestion of alkaline-thermal pretreated sludge

Journal

WASTE MANAGEMENT
Volume 153, Issue -, Pages 376-385

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2022.09.016

Keywords

Alkaline pretreatment; Anaerobic digestion; Microplastics; Sludge; Thermal hydrolysis

Funding

  1. TUBITAK (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey)
  2. [121Y156]

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The presence of microplastics (MPs) in sludge treatment systems, particularly anaerobic digesters, can have an impact on their performance. However, pretreating the sludge with alkaline solution can increase methane yield and mitigate the negative effects of MPs. Furthermore, the surface morphology, crystallinity, and carbonyl index of PET microplastics change significantly after pretreatment and digestion, which may affect their fate and environmental impact.
Plastics are resilient, hard to degrade materials that can persist in nature for centuries. Microplastics (MPs) exhibit similar tough character and hold the potential to harm marine and terrestrial ecosystems upon their release into the environment. Most modern wastewater treatment plants remove MPs from wastewater with over 90% efficiency but unfortunately concentrate them in sludge. Recent studies have reported MPs' impact on the performance of sludge treatment systems, including anaerobic digesters. Despite its resilience, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) has inherent weaknesses against alkaline and thermal conditions and becomes more prone to further degradation if exposed to such stress conditions. Sludge pretreatment practices aiming to increase biogas production by disrupting floc structure show great similarity with the stress factors mentioned. Thus, this study aims to integrate pretreatment with anaerobic digestion and investigate the fate and effects of PET MPs during these processes. For this purpose, waste activated sludge samples spiked with different doses of PET (0, 1, 3, 6 mg/g TS) in sizes of 250-500 mu m were pretreated by 0.5 M alkali for two days and then thermally hydrolyzed at 127 degrees C for 120 min. Pretreated and unpretreated sludges were digested in a 60-day biochemical methane po-tential test. The results showed that the spiking of PET MPs into sludge posed a positive impact on the methane yield of unpretreated reactors at statistically significant levels. Integrating pretreatment increased the methane yield by 22.0% and made the impact of MPs on digester efficiency no longer observable. Also, PET exposed to pretreatment and 60-day digestion experienced remarkable changes in surface morphology, crystallinity and carbonyl index, which can further impact their fate and effects on the environment.

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