Review on the impact of heavy metals from industrial wastewater effluent and removal technologies
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2024-12
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
REVIEW ARTICLEVolume 10, Issue 23
Abstract
The incidence of water pollution in developing countries is high due to the lack of
regulatory policies and laws that protect water bodies from anthropogenic activities and
industrial wastewater. Industrial wastewater contains significant amounts of heavy
metals that are detrimental to human health, aquatic organisms, and the ecosystem.
The focus of this review was to evaluate the sources and treatment methods of
wastewater, with an emphasis on technologies, advantages, disadvantages, and
innovation. It was observed that conventional methods of wastewater treatment (such
as flotation, coagulation/flocculation, and adsorption) had shown promising results but
posed certain limitations, such as the generation of high volumes of sludge, relatively
low removal rates, inefficiency in treating low metal concentrations, and sensitivity to
varying pH. Recent technologies like nanotechnology, photocatalysis, and
electrochemical coagulation have significant advantages over conventional methods for
removing heavy metals, including higher removal rates, improved energy efficiency, and
greater selectivity for specific contaminants. However, the high costs associated with
these advanced methods remain a major drawback. Therefore, we recommend that
future developments in wastewater treatment technology focus on reducing both costs
and waste generation.
Description
Keywords
Effluents 2. Heavy metals 3. Impact 4. Removal technologies 5. Wastewater 6. Water pollution