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Decreased particle size enhances the aging behavior of microplastics during sewage sludge composting: Physicochemical properties and cadmium loading

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 6 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zhihao Liu, Zhihao Liu, Hongtao Liu Hongtao Liu Hongtao Liu Hongtao Liu Lixia Wang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Lixia Wang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Hongtao Liu Hongtao Liu Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun Zhang, Hongtao Liu

Summary

Researchers investigated how particle size affects the aging behavior of PET microplastics during sewage sludge composting and their subsequent ability to accumulate cadmium. They found that smaller microplastics aged faster, with the smallest particles showing the greatest increases in surface area, oxidation, and cadmium loading. The study demonstrates that particle size plays a critical role in both the degradation rate of microplastics during composting and their capacity to adsorb heavy metal pollutants.

Polymers

Although aerobic composting is capable of aging microplastics (MPs), the influence of size on MPs aging during composting and loading of cadmium (Cd) remains unclear. Therefore, we investigated variations in the physicochemical properties of polyethylene terephthalate microplastics (PET-MPs) with different sizes (1.0 -5.0, 0.2 -1.0, and 0.05 -0.2 mm) during composting and the concentration of Cd accumulated on the surface of different-sized aged PET-MPs. The results indicated that PET-MPs exhibited size-dependent as they aged during composting, with smaller sizes aging faster. After composting, the 0.05 -0.2 mm PETMPs had the greatest increase in specific surface area (205.5 %), compared with the 1.0 -5.0 mm (18.7 %) and 0.2 -1.0 mm (95.6 %) PET-MPs. The greatest increase in the carbonyl index/oxygen-to-carbon atom ratio was also observed for the 0.05 -0.2 mm PET-MPs, which were 2.25 / 3.27 and 0.02 / 2.11 times higher than those of the 1.0 -5.0 mm and 0.2-1.0 mm PET-MPs, respectively. Similarly, size-dependent accumulation of Cd on the aged PET-MPs was also observed: 0.05-0.2 mm (5.37 mg/kg Cd) > 0.2 -1.0 mm (2.90 mg/kg Cd) > 1.0-5.0 mm (0.78 mg/kg Cd). These findings demonstrate that the aging behavior of polymer is closely related to their size, emphasizing the role of size in the fate and pollutant loading of polymer.

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