Biochar-based bioretention systems for removal of chemical and microbial pollutants from stormwater: A critical review

J Hazard Mater. 2022 Jan 15:422:126886. doi: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.126886. Epub 2021 Aug 11.

Abstract

Biochar has been increasingly used as a filter medium in engineered low impact development systems (e.g., bioretention systems) for decontamination of urban stormwater and management of hydrology. This review paper critically analyzes the performance of biochar-based biofiltration systems for removal of chemical and microbial pollutants present in urban runoff. Biochar-amended biofiltration systems efficiently remove diverse pollutants such as total nitrogen (32 - 61%), total phosphorus: (45 - 94%), heavy metals (27 - 100%), organics (54 - 100%) and microbial pollutants (log10 removal: 0.78 - 4.23) from urban runoff. The variation of biofiltration performance is due to changes in biochar characteristics, the abundance of dissolved organic matter and/or stormwater chemistry. The dominant mechanisms responsible for removal of chemical pollutants are sorption, ion exchange and/or biotransformation, whereas filtration/straining is the major mechanism for bacteria removal. The pseudo-second order and Langmuir isotherm are the best models that describe the kinetics and chemical equilibrium of pollutants, respectively. This critical review provides the fundamental scientific knowledge for designing highly efficient biochar-based bioretention systems for removal of diverse pollutants from urban stormwater. The key knowledge gaps that should be addressed in future research include long-term field-scale bioretention study, development of novel methods for filter media regeneration/reuse, and dynamics of filter media microbial communities.

Keywords: Biochar-based biofilter; Chemical and microbial pollutants; Removal mechanisms; Sorption; Stormwater.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Charcoal
  • Dissolved Organic Matter
  • Environmental Pollutants*
  • Rain

Substances

  • Dissolved Organic Matter
  • Environmental Pollutants
  • biochar
  • Charcoal