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Exploring different effects of biofilm formation and natural organic matter adsorption on the properties of three typical microplastics in the freshwater
Summary
Researchers compared how natural biofilm growth versus dissolved organic matter adsorption changes the surface properties of three common microplastics in freshwater. Biofilm formation deposited more material and reduced surface area, while organic matter adsorption created pores and cracks that actually increased surface area, indicating early-stage plastic degradation. Both processes reduced the water-repelling properties of the plastics, which affects how microplastics behave and move through aquatic environments.
Microplastics entering the aqueous environment are susceptible to the surrounding environmental processes, including biofilm formation and natural organic matter (NOM) adsorption, which significantly alters their properties and environmental fate. In this study, polyethylene (PE), polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) microplastics were respectively incubated in the untreated and disinfected freshwater to investigate the different effects of biofilm formation and only NOM adsorption on the properties of microplastics. The results showed that the total amount of fouling biomass driven by biofilm formation was markedly higher than that of NOM adsorption. The changes in microplastic surface morphologies and special surface area dominated by biofilm formation and NOM adsorption were different; biofilm formation induced various shaped bacteria and a dense layer of extracellular polymeric substances adhering on microplastic surfaces with the decreased special surface area, whereas NOM adsorption mainly resulted in the obvious pores, cracks and winkles and the increased special surface area, indicating the initial degradation of microplastics. Moreover, both biofilm formation and NOM adsorption could reduce the hydrophobicity of three microplastics. The decreased trends of the hydrophobicity of microplastics were closely related to the amount of fouling biomass in a linear relationship with different influenced coefficients (slope a), subsequently verifying that NOM adsorption played a key role in the alternation of the hydrophobicity of microplastics. Surface chemical characterization by FTIR and 3D-EEMs presented the generation of additional functional groups and components on the microplastic surface attributed to the biofilm formation and NOM adsorption in different extent and sequence. This study provides more detailed information about the different effects of biofilm formation and NOM adsorption on the properties of microplastics in the aqueous environment.
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