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Insights into the adsorption of ibuprofen onto polyethylene microplastics using molecular dynamic simulation

Journal of Environmental Management 2025 6 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Muhammad Ikhwan Nizam, Nurfarwizah Adzuan Hafiz, Mohamed Syazwan Osman, Mohamad Syafiq Abdul Wahab, Lei Wang, Noor Fitrah Abu Bakar, Mohamed Hasaan Hussain, Nur Lina Syahirah Mustapa, Chongqing Wang

Summary

Researchers used molecular dynamics simulations combined with laboratory experiments to study how ibuprofen adsorbs onto polyethylene microplastics in water. The study found that van der Waals forces dominate the interaction, with microplastics achieving an adsorption capacity of 0.41 mg/g for ibuprofen, suggesting that microplastics can act as carriers for pharmaceutical pollutants in aquatic environments.

Polymers

Microplastics (MPs) and pharmaceutical pollutants are emerging contaminants in aquatic environments. While microplastics can adsorb pharmaceutical pollutants, the mechanisms governing their interactions and the factors influencing these processes are not well understood. Understanding these interactions is crucial for assessing the environmental impact of co-existing pollutants. This study investigates the interaction between polyethylene (PE) MPs and ibuprofen (IB) in aquatic environments using a combination of molecular dynamics simulation (MDS) and batch adsorption experiments. The isotherms and kinetic models were applied to analyze the adsorption data, while MDS provided insights into the molecular interactions occurring between IB and PE MPs in aqueous environments. The adsorption capacity of IB onto PE MPs reaches 0.4139 mg/g, and the adsorption process follows the Temkin (R = 0.9671) and Elovich (R = 0.9856) models, suggesting a complex adsorption mechanism involving multilayer adsorption on the non-uniform surface. MDS reveals that non-bond interactions, particularly van der Waals forces, dominate the interaction between IB and PE MPs. This study provides critical insights into how MPs and pharmaceutical pollutants interact in aqueous environments, offering a deeper understanding of the environmental behavior of these co-existing pollutants.

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