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Separation and Quantification of Microplastics in Black Sea Water Using a Combination of Countercurrent Chromatography and Pyro-GC-MS
Summary
Countercurrent chromatography combined with pyrolysis-GC/MS achieved near-100% separation efficiency for multiple microplastic polymer types from real Black Sea seawater samples down to 1-micrometer particle sizes. This new analytical pipeline addresses a longstanding challenge in quantifying microplastics in marine waters, where complex salt and organic matrices interfere with conventional methods.
Development of novel methods for the separation, characterization, and analysis of microplastics is an urgent task. Countercurrent chromatography (CCC) has been proven to be an efficient method for the separation and preconcentration of microplastics from aqueous samples using two-phase water–oil systems. However, the efficiency of separation of microplastics from natural seawater by CCC has not been studied so far. Here we demonstrate the high efficiency of separation of microplastics from Black Sea water samples by CCC. The separation efficiency of PE, PP, PS, PVC, PET microparticles of different size (<63, 63–100, 100–250 μm) from spiked seawater samples is about 100%. The method enables the separation of microplastics with size at least down to 1 μm to be performed. The combination of CCC and pyro-GC-MS was applied to the quantification of microplastics in Black Sea water samples. Seven microplastics (μPE, μPP, μSBR, μPVC, μPET) were determined in the seawater samples under study. The total concentration of determined microplastics was about 6.5 μg/L. It was shown that the combination of CCC and pyro-GC-MS enabled robust analytical data to be obtained and hence can be applied to an accurate quantification of microplastics in seawater.