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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Assessing the Impact of Shipping on Microplastic Concentration of Filtered Samples

2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Chit Wityi Oo, Melissa Lenczewski, Khy Eam Eang, M. R. M. Brown, Boonyarak Chuanchit

Summary

Researchers evaluated the influence of different shipping and packaging methods on microplastic recovery rates from metal filters, using water samples spiked with polyethylene spheres to assess whether filtering and mailing samples in metal tins could serve as a standardized transport method for microplastics research.

Polymers

Abstract Background: As microplastics research expands across laboratories worldwide, filtering samples onto inexpensive metal filters and shipping them in metal tins could become the standard practice, replacing the impractical transportation of large water or environmental samples. Despite extensive research on microplastic distribution, there remains a notable absence of standardized methods, including sample transportation, highlighting the need to understand how shipping and packaging methods affect microplastic concentration variability. This study aims to evaluate the influence of different shipping and packaging methods on the recovery rate of microplastic particles that are collected on metal filters. Findings: Water samples spiked with polyethylene spheres were filtered onto 20 µm metal filters. The metal meshes were then placed in metal tins and subjected to six different packaging and shipping methods, ranging from paper boxes and envelopes to insulated hard and foam coolers. Laser Direct Infrared Spectroscopy was employed for the detection and quantification of polyethylene particles. The results revealed significant variation in recovery rates based on the shipping method. The highest recovery rates were observed in samples shipped in insulated hard or foam coolers, with at approximately 91-92% of the microplastics retained, while the lowest recovery was found in samples shipped in a flat rate mailing envelope (10%). Paper boxes with materials that eliminate space for movement inside the box offered moderate protection, with recovery rates of approximately 70%. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that shipping methods can substantially influence the retention of microplastics during transport from field sites to laboratories for analysis. Shipping methods where the packing remains upward such as with a cooler with a handle provided the highest recovery rates. We infer that this is due to the better care in handling from mail/shipping carriers; however, this method cost more. Lowest recover rates occurred when metal tins could freely move within the packaging and the package was allowed to be in any orientation. The findings highlight the importance of packaging choice in minimizing microplastic loss during shipping. Further research is necessary to standardize sample handling protocols and ensure consistent results across various transportation conditions, ultimately improving the reliability of microplastic contamination assessments.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Assessing the impact of shipping on microplastic concentration of filtered samples

Researchers found that packaging method significantly affects microplastic recovery rates when shipping filtered water samples, with insulated hard or foam coolers retaining approximately 91-92% of polyethylene particles compared to only 10% recovery in flat-rate mailing envelopes.

Article Tier 2

Development and testing of a fractionated filtration for sampling of microplastics in water

Researchers developed and tested a fractionated filtration system for sampling microplastics in water bodies, proposing a standardized sampling concept that accounts for plastic-specific properties to improve comparability of microplastic data across different studies and environments.

Article Tier 2

Efficacy of Microplastic Separation Techniques on Seawater Samples: Testing Accuracy Using High-Density Polyethylene

Scientists tested four common methods for separating microplastics from seawater samples and found that each method recovered different amounts and types of particles. Standardizing separation methods is critical for making microplastic concentration data comparable across different studies.

Article Tier 2

Microplastics in seawater: a study of pretreatment, separation, and recovery.

Researchers developed and compared pretreatment, separation, and recovery methods for isolating microplastics from seawater samples, addressing the methodological diversity that limits comparability across marine monitoring studies. The study identified optimal combinations of techniques that improve microplastic recovery efficiency while minimizing contamination and sample loss.

Article Tier 2

Assessment of microplastic sampling and extraction methods for drinking waters

This study compared sampling and extraction methods for microplastics in drinking water, testing stainless steel filters, glass fiber filters, and centrifugal approaches, and finding substantial variation in recovery efficiency depending on particle size and method, underscoring the urgent need for standardized protocols to enable cross-study comparisons.

Share this paper