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Impact of hydrodynamic conditions on ofloxacin adsorption by microplastics: roles of turbulence and equilibrium capacity

Environmental Science Processes & Impacts 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
G. W. Zou, Niling Zou, Yuqing Tan, Hongjun Xiao, Qiming Cheng, Zhen Liu, Kaifeng Wang, Jiayue Zhu, Fan Yang, D. Z. Du, Yao Chen

Summary

Researchers systematically investigated how hydrodynamic conditions including turbulence affect the adsorption of the antibiotic ofloxacin onto polystyrene and polyvinyl chloride microplastics, finding that adsorption followed pseudo-second-order kinetics and Freundlich isotherm behaviour, with turbulence influencing adsorption rates and equilibrium capacity.

Polymers

Understanding the complex interplay between hydrodynamic conditions and the dynamics of antibiotic adsorption by microplastics (MPs) is essential for accurately assessing environmental risks in aquatic systems. This study systematically investigated the adsorption mechanisms of ofloxacin (OFL) onto polystyrene (PS) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) MPs under varying hydrodynamic conditions. Batch adsorption experiments demonstrated that the adsorption of both materials for OFL follows pseudo-second-order kinetic profiles (R2 > 0.99) and exhibits Freundlich isothermal behavior (R2 > 0.98), suggesting that heterogeneous surface-driven multilayer adsorption is the predominant mechanism. Material characterization revealed that the physicochemical properties of PS featured a significantly higher specific surface area (2.10 m2 g-1) than PVC (0.87 m2 g-1), yet their equilibrium adsorption capacities were comparable (29.33 µg g-1 for PS vs. 30.47 µg g-1 for PVC under high agitation). This discrepancy implies that factors such as surface roughness and micropore architecture, rather than merely specific surface area, play a dominant role in determining adsorption efficiency. Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy confirmed the absence of new covalent bonds, indicating that physical interactions-such as hydrophobic interactions, van der Waals forces, and micropore filling-are the primary adsorption mechanisms. Hydrodynamic conditions emerged as a critical regulator of adsorption dynamics. Increasing turbulence intensity (40-200 rpm) shortened the equilibrium attainment time by more than 83% and enhanced equilibrium adsorption capacities (with a maximum increase of 16.2% for PS and 6.5% for PVC). These findings highlight that hydrodynamic forcing caused by natural flow regimes and anthropogenic disturbances can exacerbate microplastic-antibiotic composite contamination through enhanced adsorption processes.

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