Molecules, Vol. 31, Pages 1862: Green Roof Substrates for Water Quality Improvement: A Critical Review of Biosorption–Phytoremediation Synergies

Fuente: Molecules - Revista científica (MDPI)
Molecules, Vol. 31, Pages 1862: Green Roof Substrates for Water Quality Improvement: A Critical Review of Biosorption–Phytoremediation Synergies
Molecules doi: 10.3390/molecules31111862
Authors:
Jordana Georgin
Dison S. P. Franco
Youssef Miyah
Noureddine El Messaoudi
Ashraf M. Al-Msiedeen
Salah Knani

Green roofs offer significant potential for urban stormwater management, yet their capacity to improve runoff water quality is constrained by the limited pollutant retention of conventional substrates and inherent nutrient leaching risks. This critical review synthesizes recent advances in substrate engineering and phytoremediation to establish an integrated framework for transforming green roofs into active bio-filtration systems. Our analysis reveals that amending conventional substrates with waste-derived biosorbents substantially enhances heavy metal and nutrient retention through complementary mechanisms of surface complexation, ion exchange, and microprecipitation. When strategically coupled with hyperaccumulator plant species and rhizospheric microbial communities, these amended substrates significantly reduce contaminant loads in urban runoff while maintaining hydraulic functionality. We critically evaluate standard growing media versus substrates amended with targeted biosorbents: biochar, which enhances heavy metal retention and hydraulic conductivity via surface complexation; seaweed biomass, which provides superior water retention and cation exchange while reducing synthetic fertilizer dependence; and chitin-rich crab shell waste, which promotes microprecipitation of metals and phosphates while valorizing marine waste. The novelty resides not in the materials themselves, but in their synergistic combination and the systematic comparative analysis of their retention mechanisms under green roof hydrological conditions. This review further identifies critical engineering trade-offs, including biosorbent-induced hydraulic conductivity reductions and long-term adsorption site saturation, and provides actionable design thresholds for amendment dosing, substrate depth, and species selection. Ultimately, this work establishes a mechanistic and practical roadmap for next-generation green roofs that simultaneously optimize stormwater retention, runoff quality, and circular economy valorization, highlighting priority research directions for long-term field validation and climate-adaptive standardization.