Abstract

The aim of this research was to determine whether water hyacinth can be used to remove heavy metals, such as cadmium, arsenic, lead, zinc, and copper, from industrial wastewater. Investigations of the pollution removal or prevention potential of aquatic macrophytes, such as heavy metal bio-indicators in aquatic habitats, can prove to be advanced field studies. Water hyacinth is one of the aquatic plant species that has been effectively utilized for the treatment of wastewater. It is extremely effective in removing stains, suspended solids, BOD, organic matter, and heavy metals. This research focused on the use of water hyacinth to treat wastewater from heavy metals. Water hyacinths can grow in sewage, absorbing and digesting contaminants and transforming sewage effluents into comparatively clean water in the process. As a result, the plants have the potential to be used as natural water purification systems at a fraction of the cost of a standard sewage treatment facility. The experiment was performed using healthy, young, and acclimatized water hyacinths. Containment water with a cadmium concentration of 0.5 mg/L, arsenic concentration of 0.5 mg/L, lead concentration of 2 mg/L, zinc concentration of 5 mg/L, and copper concentration of 5 mg/L was added to five different polyethylene pots with 100 g of water hyacinth in each pot. After 30 days, the removal efficiency for heavy metals (Cd, As, Pb, Zn, and Cu) reached 59–92%, and the results were within the permitted limits according to the National Technical Regulation on Industrial Wastewater in Vietnam. Based on this information, it is possible to deduce that water hyacinth can be utilized to remove cadmium, arsenic, lead, zinc, and copper from industrial wastewater effluents efficiently.

Highlights

  • Water pollution is a burning problem for developing countries

  • Arsenic, lead, copper, and zinc were prepared in a standard solution of 100 μg/mL

  • The results show that the ability of water hyacinth to accumulate heavy metals gradually decreased with the remaining heavy metal content in the water in the order

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Summary

Introduction

Water pollution is a burning problem for developing countries. The amount of domestic and industrial waste increases exponentially. Amounts of waste are increasing but the centralized treatment systems are not enough to deal with them along with unconcentrated discharge habits, which have caused extremely serious water pollution. Heavy metal pollution involving cadmium (Cd), arsenic (As), lead (Pb), zinc (Zn), and copper (Cu) is a serious problem due to the dangerous toxicity of these elements affecting human health, organisms, and the environment [1]

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