0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Experimental Confirmationof the Interception HistoryParadigm for Colloid (Micro and Nanoparticle) Transport in PorousMedia

Figshare 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
William P. Johnson (1541365), Luis Andres Ullauri (21243616), Bashar M. Al-Zghoul (20666879), Diogo Bolster (2101723)

Summary

Researchers experimentally confirmed the Interception History Paradigm for colloid transport in porous media, demonstrating that retention profiles for micro- and nanoplastics deviate from predictions of Colloid Filtration Theory under unfavorable surface interaction conditions. Their findings validate the role of interception history — prior contact events at grain surfaces — in explaining anomalous retention behavior of colloids including engineered nanomaterials and plastic particles.

For pathogens, engineered nanomaterials, micro- and nanoplastics, and other colloids, variance from expectations of Colloid Filtration Theory is well-demonstrated under unfavorable conditions where a repulsive barrier exists in colloid-surface interactions. Specifically, their retention profiles (RPs) are nonexponential. We present experiments demonstrating that nonexponential RPs arise from variations in interception history among attached colloids wherein the fraction of the colloid population that attaches after multiple interceptions is negligible under favorable conditions and is significant to dominant under unfavorable conditions. We show that RPs were exponential only for colloids that attached under favorable conditions, whereas RPs were nonmonotonic for colloids that attached under unfavorable conditions, with RPs for multiple intercepting attachers assuming γ distributions having maxima at transport distances that increased with interception order. We show that in our experiments the value of attachment efficiency (α) was greater for multiple than single interception attachers, and we speculate on the origin of this change in α. We emphasize that such variance from overall exponential RP reflects a fundamental aspect of colloid transport under unfavorable conditions, as they arise without significant variations in colloid size, surface properties, and density, and without straining and detachment.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Experimental Confirmation of the Interception History Paradigm for Colloid (Micro and Nanoparticle) Transport in Porous Media

Laboratory experiments confirmed the interception history paradigm for colloid filtration under chemically unfavorable conditions, demonstrating that microplastics and other colloidal particles follow predictable deposition patterns in porous media—providing mechanistic data relevant to modeling MP transport through soils and aquifers.

Article Tier 2

Retention and transport behavior of microplastic particles in water-saturated porous media

Researchers investigated microplastic transport in water-saturated porous media using polystyrene microspheres, finding that particle size primarily determined retention behavior, with 50 nm particles showing high mobility while 500 nm particles exhibited greater attachment and slower migration.

Article Tier 2

Mechanism comparisons of transport-deposition-reentrainment between microplastics and natural mineral particles in porous media: A theoretical and experimental study

Researchers compared the transport, deposition, and re-entrainment behavior of microplastic particles versus natural mineral particles in porous media, finding key differences driven by density, surface charge, and shape that affect how microplastics migrate through soils and sediments.

Article Tier 2

Effects of clay minerals on the transport of nanoplastics through water-saturated porous media

Column experiments with clay-containing saturated porous media showed that clay minerals reduced nanoplastic transport by enhancing particle retention through bridging flocculation and charge neutralization, with kaolinite having greater retention effects than montmorillonite, informing predictions of nanoplastic mobility in clay-rich soils.

Article Tier 2

Micro- and nanoplastics retention in porous media exhibits different dependence on grain surface roughness and clay coating with particle size

Researchers found that grain surface roughness and clay coatings affect the retention of microplastics and nanoplastics in porous media differently depending on particle size, with nanoplastics behaving oppositely to microplastics in certain soil conditions — complicating predictions of plastic transport in groundwater systems.

Share this paper