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Integrating Metal–Phenolic Networks-Mediated Separation and Machine Learning-Aided Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy for Accurate Nanoplastics Quantification and Classification
Summary
Researchers combined a metal-based separation technique with machine learning and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy to detect and classify nanoplastics in environmental samples. The method achieved high accuracy in identifying different types of nanoplastics at very low concentrations. This approach could make it significantly easier and more reliable to monitor nanoplastic contamination in real-world water and soil samples.
Increasing accumulation of nanoplastics across ecosystems poses a significant threat to both terrestrial and aquatic life. Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) is an emerging technique used for nanoplastics detection. However, the identification and classification of nanoplastics using SERS faces challenges regarding sensitivity and accuracy as nanoplastics are sparsely dispersed in the environment. Metal-phenolic networks (MPNs) have the potential to rapidly concentrate and separate various types and sizes of nanoplastics. SERS combined with machine learning may improve prediction accuracy. Herein, we report the integration of MPNs-mediated separation with machine learning-aided SERS methods for the accurate classification and high-precision quantification of nanoplastics, which is tailored to include the complete region of characteristic peaks across diverse nanoplastics in contrast to the traditional manual analysis of SERS spectra on a singular characteristic peak. Our customized machine learning system (e.g., outlier detection, classification, quantification) allows for the identification of detectable nanoplastics (accuracy 81.84%), accurate classification (accuracy > 97%), and sensitive quantification of various types of nanoplastics (polystyrene (PS), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), polyethylene (PE), and poly(lactic acid) (PLA)) down to ultralow concentrations (0.1 ppm) as well as accurate classification (accuracy > 92%) of nanoplastic mixtures at a subppm level. The effectiveness of this approach is substantiated by its ability to discern between different nanoplastic mixtures and detect nanoplastic samples in natural water systems.
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