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Heteroaggregation, disaggregation, and migration of nanoplastics with nanosized activated carbon in aquatic environments: Effects of particle property, water chemistry, and hydrodynamic condition

Water Research 2024 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yongtao Li, Lihua Li, Weilin Huang Lihua Li, Chengyu Chen, Chengyu Chen, Dan Luo, Dan Luo, Chengyu Chen, Weilin Huang Dan Luo, Chengyu Chen, Shijie Luo, Shijie Luo, Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Dan Luo, Chengyu Chen, Dan Luo, Jiale Yue, Dan Luo, Jiale Yue, Xinzhi Li, Weilin Huang Lihua Li, Lihua Li, Yongtao Li, Shijie Luo, Lianrong Chen, Chengyu Chen, Lianrong Chen, Yongtao Li, Weilin Huang Yongtao Li, Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Yongtao Li, Xin Chen, Yongtao Li, Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Yongtao Li, Yongtao Li, Bowen Wen, Bowen Wen, Yongtao Li, Xitian Luo, Yongtao Li, Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Chengyu Chen, Chengyu Chen, Chengyu Chen, Yongtao Li, Yongtao Li, Yongtao Li, Yongtao Li, Weilin Huang Yongtao Li, Xitian Luo, Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Yongtao Li, Weilin Huang Weilin Huang Chengyu Chen, Yongtao Li, Chengyu Chen, Yongtao Li, Yongtao Li, Chengyu Chen, Chengyu Chen, Yongtao Li, Chengyu Chen, Chengyu Chen, Weilin Huang Yongtao Li, Yongtao Li, Chengyu Chen, Yongtao Li, Chengyu Chen, Weilin Huang

Summary

Researchers studied how nanosized activated carbon interacts with positively and negatively charged nanoplastics under various water chemistry and hydrodynamic conditions. They found that aggregation behavior depended strongly on particle charge, pH, and the presence of natural organic matter like humic acid. The study suggests that interactions with engineered nanomaterials in aquatic environments can significantly influence how far nanoplastics travel, with implications for predicting their environmental fate.

Polymers

Nanosized activated carbon (NAC) as emerging engineered nanomaterials may interact with nanoplastics prevalent in aquatic environments to affect their fate and transport. This study investigated the effects of particle property (charge and concentration), water chemistry [electrolytes, pH, humic acid (HA), and sodium alginate (SA)], and hydrodynamic condition [wave (i.e., sonication) and turbulence (i.e., stirring)] on the heteroaggregation, disaggregation, and migration of NAC with positively charged amino-modified polystyrene (APS) or negatively charged bare polystyrene (BPS) nanoplastics. The homoaggregation rate of APS was slower than its heteroaggregation rate with NAC, with critical coagulation concentrations (CCC) decreasing at higher NAC concentrations. However, the homoaggregation rate of BPS was intermediate between its heteroaggregation rates under low (10 mg/L) and high (40 mg/L) NAC concentrations. The heteroaggregation rate of APS+NAC enhanced as pH increasing from 3 to 10, whereas the opposite trend was observed for BPS+NAC. In NaCl solution or at CaCl concentration below 2.5 mM, HA stabilized APS+NAC and BPS+NAC via steric hindrance more effectively than SA. Above 2.5 mM CaCl, SA destabilized APS+NAC and BPS+NAC by calcium bridging more strongly than HA. The migration process of heteroaggregates was simulated in nearshore environments. The simulation suggests that without hydrodynamic disturbance, APS+NAC (971 m) may travel farther than BPS+NAC (901 m). Mild wave (30-s sonication) and intense turbulence (1500-rpm stirring) could induce disaggregation of heteroaggregates, thus potentially extending the migration distances of APS+NAC and BPS+NAC to 1611 and 2160 m, respectively. Conversely, intense wave (20-min sonication) and mild turbulence (150-rpm stirring) may further promote aggregation of heteroaggregates, shortening the migration distances of APS+NAC and BPS+NAC to 262 and 552 m, respectively. Particle interactions mainly involved van der Waals attraction, electrostatic repulsion, steric hindrance, calcium bridging, π-π interactions, hydrogen bonding, and hydrophobic interactions. These findings highlight the important influence of NAC on the fate, transport, and risks of nanoplastics in aquatic environments.

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