SeeMarkFly t1_irdh41q wrote
Reply to comment by SandDuner509 in Widely used sewer pipe repair technology creates and emits nanoplastics into the air by ajwhelton
While trying to filter tiny particles, you also catch all the bigger particles, clogging your filter up really fast.
Bones_and_Tomes t1_irdj4p9 wrote
Water filtration might help. Bubbler?
SeeMarkFly t1_irdjqzc wrote
A water curtain wouldn't clog up but then what? Now you have to store the contaminated water or filter particles out of the water in real-time (same problem as before but now wet).
Flushing it down the drain was the original problem.
EmperorGeek t1_ire8dwb wrote
Saw a technique where they add something like a flocking agent to the water to cause clumping of micro plastics into manageable blobs. Don’t remember if the article discussed the super-fine particles.
SeeMarkFly t1_iretf8c wrote
I've seen that used in filtering deep-fat fryers. A binding agent is added to the oil that clumps the small particles together. A larger mesh filter can then be used to get most of the small particle contamination.
And because the process we are talking about is NOT continuous but a short process, that would be a good solution.
Would you like some fries with that?
EmperorGeek t1_irf31ld wrote
Mmmm … Mom says I ate enough plastic fries as a kid!
Bones_and_Tomes t1_irdxoi6 wrote
Sure, but keeping them in the sewer is preferable to floating about in the air. Microplastics are probably better dealt with at water processing plants.
beanmosheen t1_ire7zuo wrote
They don't. Treatment plants can't remove micro plastics.
[deleted] t1_irg97w5 wrote
[removed]
FishinWabigoon t1_irecw8a wrote
But then we need nano filters that run the entire city's waste through them to capture these sewer repair nanoplastics. The filters would clog.
Bones_and_Tomes t1_irer5i9 wrote
So how do we fix this problem. Obviously in an ideal world the microplastics wouldnt get into the water in the first place, so are they more destructive floating about in the air or in water?
FishinWabigoon t1_irf85iy wrote
Id probably be rich if I knew the answer
EmperorGeek t1_ire8hjd wrote
From the sewer they get into the ocean don’t they? (Or are at least released to the local aquifer at some point?)
Bones_and_Tomes t1_ire9coz wrote
They should run through a water treatment plant first.
EmperorGeek t1_ireae3w wrote
“Should” but there are a lot of storm drains that lead straight to bodies of water.
Dry-Conference4530 t1_irdwx8d wrote
Could use a chemical to cause the particles to bind together in a holding tank.
knselektor t1_ire2ovu wrote
congeal the particles with a gel, like clearing a consomme
pipnina t1_ireel9c wrote
Can either boil the water off or centrifuge it perhaps?
cheezemeister_x t1_iref9ms wrote
Multilayer filters solve this problem.
SeeMarkFly t1_irf6fts wrote
Yea, that would work.
I have always worked on large continuous air flow systems and multiple filters are even more expensive than single filters for my applications. Hence I shy away from them.
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