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Atmospheric Microplastics: Inputs and Outputs

Micro 2025 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 63 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Christine C. Gaylarde, José Antônio Baptista Neto, Estefan Monteiro da Fonseca

Summary

This review describes how microplastics move between the Earth's surface and the atmosphere, with an estimated 8.6 megatons per year floating in the air above oceans alone. Clothing fibers are the biggest contributor to outdoor airborne microplastics, while indoor sources include furniture fabrics, ventilation systems, and human movement. The findings are significant because airborne microplastics can travel thousands of kilometers and are inhaled daily, making air a major but understudied route of human exposure.

Study Type Environmental

The dynamic relationship between microplastics (MPs) in the air and on the Earth’s surface involves both natural and anthropogenic forces. MPs are transported from the ocean to the air by bubble scavenging and sea spray formation and are released from land sources by air movements and human activities. Up to 8.6 megatons of MPs per year have been estimated to be in air above the oceans. They are distributed by wind, water and fomites and returned to the Earth’s surface via rainfall and passive deposition, but can escape to the stratosphere, where they may exist for months. Anthropogenic sprays, such as paints, agrochemicals, personal care and cosmetic products, and domestic and industrial procedures (e.g., air conditioning, vacuuming and washing, waste disposal, manufacture of plastic-containing objects) add directly to the airborne MP load, which is higher in internal than external air. Atmospheric MPs are less researched than those on land and in water, but, in spite of the major problem of a lack of standard methods for determining MP levels, the clothing industry is commonly considered the main contributor to the external air pool, while furnishing fabrics, artificial ventilation devices and the presence and movement of human beings are the main source of indoor MPs. The majority of airborne plastic particles are fibers and fragments; air currents enable them to reach remote environments, potentially traveling thousands of kilometers through the air, before being deposited in various forms of precipitation (rain, snow or “dust”). The increasing preoccupation of the populace and greater attention being paid to industrial ecology may help to reduce the concentration and spread of MPs and nanoparticles (plastic particles of less than 100 nm) from domestic and industrial activities in the future.

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