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A comprehensive review of microplastic aging: Laboratory simulations, physicochemical properties, adsorption mechanisms, and environmental impacts

The Science of The Total Environment 2024 35 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yuan Li, Yu Gao, Yuzhi Liu, Yuzhi Liu, Yuan Li, Yuan Li, Wei Gao, Yuzhi Liu, Yuzhi Liu, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Yuan Li, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Jun Zhao Yuan Li, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Donglei Zou, Yuan Li, Yingzi Lin, Yingzi Lin, Jun Zhao, Jun Zhao Jun Zhao Jun Zhao

Summary

This review examines how microplastics change as they age in the environment through exposure to sunlight, water, and chemicals, becoming rougher and more chemically reactive over time. Aged microplastics absorb more pollutants than fresh ones and release harmful additives and free radicals, meaning the microplastics people encounter in the real world may be more dangerous than the pristine particles typically used in lab studies.

As a new type of ecological environment problem, microplastic pollution is a severe challenge faced by the world, and its threat and potential risk to the ecosystem have become a hot research spot in the current environmental field. Microplastics (MPs) in the natural environment will experience aging effect, aging will change the physical and chemical properties of MPs and affect the adsorption behavior. Recently reported characterization techniques of MPs and laboratory simulation of aging are reviewed. The aging mechanism between MPs and different pollutants and the intervention mechanism of environmental factors (MPs, pollutants and water quality environment) were revealed. In addition, to further understand the potential ecological toxicity of MPs after aging, the release and harm of additives during aging, produce the environmentally persistent free radicals, and the mechanism of reactive oxygen species (ROS) removal of pollutants adsorbed on the surface of MPs were summarized. Future research efforts should focus more on bridging the disparity between laboratory aging simulations and natural environmental conditions to enhance the authenticity and ecological relevance of such studies. The ROS production mechanism of MPs provides a reference direction for removing pollutants adsorbed by aged MPs.

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