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Unfolding the interaction of radioactive Cs and Sr with polyethylene-derived microplastics in marine environment

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Yadav, Sonali, Rout, Sabyasachi, Joshi, Vikram, Pulhani, Vandana, Kumar, A. V.

Summary

A mesocosm study examined how radioactive cesium and strontium interact with pristine, radiation-exposed, and marine-weathered polyethylene microplastics, finding that environmental aging—through biofilm formation and surface roughening—significantly increased the plastic particles' capacity to sorb radioactive contaminants.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Abstract To unveil the interaction of radioactive Cs and Sr with polyethylene-derived microplastics in the marine environment, a mesocosm study was conducted in a stepwise manner by investigating the uptake capability of microplastics at three different stages: pristine, radiation-exposed, and marine-exposed microplastics. The study demonstrates that the physio-chemical properties of microplastics undergo significant alterations upon exposure to the environment, leading to the emergence of biofilm formation upon marine exposure, while radiation exposure induces surface roughness and cracks. Biofilm growth enhances the uptake of radionuclides by microplastics. However, the growth of biofilms increases the density of microplastics through aggregation, leading to a buoyancy transition from positive to negative buoyancy. Various interaction mechanisms, such as electrostatic, ion–dipole, and physical diffusion interactions, were identified as important mechanisms playing key roles in radionuclide binding to polyethylene-derived microplastics. Despite the significantly lower apparent distribution coefficients observed for radio Cs (in the range of 7.3–23.6 L/kg) and Sr (in the range of 4.3–8.06 L/kg) in the marine system, typically 2–3 orders of magnitude lower than those on marine suspended sediment, this study offers compelling evidence that microplastics in marine environments are capable of sequestering radio Cs and Sr. Consequently, microplastics can potentially accumulate these radionuclides, highlighting their role as potential reservoirs as well as vectors of radionuclides in marine environments.

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Additional file 1 of Unfolding the interaction of radioactive Cs and Sr with polyethylene-derived microplastics in marine environment

This supplementary file provides additional data from a study examining the interaction of radioactive caesium and strontium with polyethylene-derived microplastics in the marine environment.

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Additional file 1 of Unfolding the interaction of radioactive Cs and Sr with polyethylene-derived microplastics in marine environment

This supplementary file provides additional data from a study examining the interaction of radioactive caesium and strontium with polyethylene-derived microplastics in the marine environment.

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