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A multi-analytical approach to evaluate the removal efficiency of polystyrene nanoparticles in water treatment processes

Chemosphere 2024 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alexis Cherri, Alexis Cherri, Alexis Cherri, Yongrong Zou, Gilles Mailhot Yongrong Zou, Yongrong Zou, Yongrong Zou, Gilles Mailhot Gilles Mailhot Gilles Mailhot Mohamad Sleiman, Mohamad Sleiman, Mohamad Sleiman, Mohamad Sleiman, Mohamad Sleiman, Gilles Mailhot Gilles Mailhot Gilles Mailhot

Summary

Researchers compared four analytical methods — pyrolysis-GCMS, UV-Vis spectroscopy, total organic carbon, and turbidity — for tracking polystyrene nanoplastic degradation under UV irradiation, finding that pyrolysis-GCMS overestimates removal rates twofold and that even after the styrene signal disappears, only 50% of organic carbon is actually mineralized.

The removal of nanoplastics (NP) from water using various treatment processes has gained significant attention recently. This study comprehensively characterizes the degradation of polystyrene nanoparticles (concentration: 200 ppm, diameter: 140 nm) through UVC irradiation. For the first time, we compared four analytical methods to monitor removal efficiency: Py-GCMS, UV-Visible spectroscopy, TOC, and Turbidity. Additionally, DLS, TEM, and SEC were used to understand changes in particle size, morphology, and molecular weight. Results showed that Py-GCMS overestimated the removal rate by a factor of 2 compared to Turbidity and UV-Visible measurements, which were in agreement. Furthermore, after 200 h of irradiation, the styrene signal disappears from the pyrogram, although the mineralization rate reaches only 50%, as determined by total organic carbon (TOC) analysis. The particle size decreased slowly, reaching 100 nm after 150 h, while a significant decrease in molecular weight indicated high chain-scission. These findings emphasize the importance of a multi-analytical approach to accurately assess NP removal efficiency and understand degradation mechanisms.

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