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Quantification of microplastics in agricultural soils by total organic carbon -solid sample combustion analysis

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yoonjung Seo, Yoonjung Seo, Yoonjung Seo, Yoonjung Seo, Yunru Lai, Pingan Song Yunru Lai, Guangnan Chen, Guangnan Chen, Yunru Lai, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, John Dearnaley, Guangnan Chen, John Dearnaley, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Guangnan Chen, Xiaohuan Liu, Pingan Song Pingan Song Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Pingan Song Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Pingan Song Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Pingan Song Pingan Song Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Shaobin Wang, Pingan Song

Summary

Researchers developed an improved method for extracting and measuring microplastics in agricultural soils using a total organic carbon analyzer, achieving recovery rates above 94%. When they applied this technique to strawberry farm soils that use plastic mulch films, they found measurable levels of microplastic contamination dominated by polyethylene. The method provides a more practical and accurate way to quantify the actual weight of microplastics in soil, which is important for assessing pollution from agricultural plastic use.

Polymers

Accurate quantification of microplastics (MPs) in soils is a significant challenge due to the complex nature of the organo-mineral matrix. Fine mineral particles and organic matter often interfere with the efficiency of extraction, identification and quantification of MPs from soils. Here, an optimized MP extraction and quantification method is proposed, using total organic carbon analyser-solid sample combustion unit (TOC-SSM) analysis. The approach entails a field survey, digestion of organic matter by Piranha solution, density separation, and quantification. This method achieves a high total recovery rate of 97.39 ± 14.25 (SE) % for particles sized between 300 and 600 µm, and 94.80 ± 13.48 (SE) % for particles less than 300 µm with spiked soil as samples. The optimised method is then applied to strawberry farm soils that use plastic mulch films to quantify MP contamination levels. Our results indicate MP concentrations of 12.24 ± 3.65 (SE) mg kg<sup>-1</sup> (for particles of 300-2000 µm in size) and 2.62 ± 0.66 (SE) mg kg<sup>-1</sup> (for particles smaller than 300 µm). With improved simplicity and the ability to provide the actual weight of plastics for the extraction and quantification of MPs, this work offers a potential approach for assessing low-density plastics in the northeastern Australian agricultural soils with a dominant MP contamination, specifically polyethylene (PE).

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