Litcius/Paper detail

A critical review of state-of-the-art technologies for electroplating wastewater treatment

Mohamed T. Kamar, Hoda Elattar, Ahmed S. Mahmoud, Robert W. Peters, Mohamed K. Mostafa

2022International Journal of Environmental & Analytical Chemistry46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The discharge of untreated electroplating wastewater could lead to the formation of toxic metal-organic complexes that is harmful for the environment. There are several processes reported to treat electroplating wastewater such as chemical precipitation, adsorption, coagulation and flocculation, ion exchange, electrocoagulation, membrane filtration, advanced oxidation process and biorecovery. These methods provide the possibility to capture different toxic metals and remove organic pollutants. The combination of different processes together has shown higher efficiencies in removing a wide range of contaminants than single treatment systems. The main challenge is identifying the highest treatment performance and most cost-efficient process. This review provides an overview of treatment technologies for electroplating wastewater and describes the strengths and drawbacks among them. The efficiency of different systems and kinds of pollutants removed, along with a comparison between these systems have been analysed. When comparing the treatment technologies, it is hard to identify the most efficient one as each method has been successful in removing certain pollutants that has not been recovered from the other methods. Therefore, making the decision on identifying the best treatment technology depends on the objective of the treatment and the targeted pollutants. Furthermore, the cost of different technologies has been evaluated based on literature to have a brief look at cost differences between the technologies. When targeting removal of heavy metals, the highest cost of treatment has been reported at around 4.45 $/m3 for the adsorption method employing nano zero valent iron (nZVI). While the lowest cost of treatment has been reported at about 0.35 USD/m3 employing an adsorption method followed by electrodeposition.

Topics & Concepts

PollutantElectrocoagulationFlocculationElectroplatingWastewaterEnvironmental scienceSewage treatmentWaste managementFiltration (mathematics)AdsorptionWater treatmentProcess engineeringComputer scienceMaterials scienceEnvironmental engineeringChemistryNanotechnologyEngineeringMathematicsStatisticsLayer (electronics)Organic chemistryEnvironmental remediation with nanomaterialsAdvanced oxidation water treatmentElectrochemical Analysis and Applications