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Influence of laundry effluent stability on fibre fragments indentification

Koža & obuća 2025
Petra Mihovilović, Branka Vojnović, Dragana Begović

Summary

Researchers examined how the stability of laundry effluent samples affects the identification and characterization of synthetic fiber fragments (FFs) released during textile washing. The study addressed methodological challenges in quantifying fibrillar microplastics across varying effluent concentrations and degradation states, finding that sample stability is a critical variable influencing accurate fiber fragment analysis.

Polymers

Among various sources of microplastics, synthetic textiles are one of the main sources of fibrillar microplastics in aquatic environments. Fiber fragments (FFs) are mostly released during the washing process of textiles. The challenges associated with FFs characterization and quantification are related to the wide range of concentrations and degree of degradation. The laundry effluent samples present a particular challenge as they contain a residual component of the detergents used in washing processes, such as sufractants. In addition, surfactants promote the formation of aggregates composed of fibre fragments and inorganic components of the detergent (e.g. zeolites). These aggregates exhibit altered physico-chemical properties that lead to an underestimation of the fiber fragments number, which is a direct consequence of the entanglement of several fibre fragments. The aim of this study was to investigate the possibility of identifying polyethylene terephthalate fibre fragments both in water and detergent suspensions. In order to investigate the influence of solution or suspension stability on the FFs identification, the formation of aggregates was carried out with both freshly prepared but also with 5 days aged suspensions. The amount of fibre fragments in the suspensions was determined gravimetrically after membrane filtration followed by characterisation of the filter cake using an optical microscope. It was confirmed that the presence of detergents leads to aggregate formation. Furthermore, aging of the solution results in an even greater extent of aggregate formation.

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