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Soil aggregation alterations under soil microplastic and biochar addition and aging process

Environmental Pollution 2025 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 63 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Chenghui Luo, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Chenghui Luo, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Longyuan Yang, Longyuan Yang, Le Liu, Le Liu, Le Liu, Longyuan Yang, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Haixiao Li, Longyuan Yang, Haixiao Li, Chenghui Luo, Chenghui Luo, Chenghui Luo, Le Liu, Cheng Li, Chenghui Luo, Chenghui Luo, Chenghui Luo, Le Liu, Le Liu, Le Liu, Le Liu, Le Liu, Cheng Li, Cheng Li, Cheng Li, Haixiao Li, Hua Zhong, Ji Wang Wei Qiao, Haixiao Li, Hua Zhong, Ji Wang

Summary

An eight-month experiment found that polyethylene and polypropylene microplastics disrupted soil structure by breaking apart soil clumps, and this damage worsened as the plastics aged over time. Surprisingly, adding biochar, which is often proposed as a soil improvement, actually made some of the microplastic damage worse for certain soil aggregate sizes. This research shows that microplastic contamination in agricultural soil can degrade soil health in ways that may be difficult to reverse.

Polymers

Soil microplastics (MPs) are a substantial threat to soil health, particularly by disrupting soil aggregation. Additionally, MPs undergo aging processes in the soil, which may significantly alter their long-term impacts on soil structure. To investigate these effects, we conducted an eight-month soil incubation experiment, examining the influence of MPs and their aging on soil aggregation. The experiment utilized a factorial design with various combinations of MPs and biochar additions: 1% by weight of 1000-mesh polyethylene and polypropylene MPs, and 5-mm biochar, resulting in six treatment groups: [CK], [PE], [PP], [Biochar], [PE + biochar], and [PP + biochar]. Our findings revealed that both MPs and biochar underwent aging throughout the incubation, evidenced by the formation of oxygen-containing functional groups on their surfaces. Microplastics, particularly polyethylene, primarily affected the 0.5-1 mm and >2 mm aggregate fractions, with average reductions of 21% and 77%, respectively. These adverse effects intensified with the aging of MPs. Contrary to expectations, the addition of biochar was found to exacerbate the negative impacts of MPs on the 0.25-0.5 mm aggregates, with a decrease of 11% associated with PE MPs. The influence of biochar on mitigating the damage caused by MPs to soil aggregation is dependent on aggregate size.

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