0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Fully quantitative analysis of nano-plastics in environmental samples using TD-PTR-MS and multivariate standard addition

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2024 Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nemat Omidikia, Thomas Röckmann, Holzinger, Rupert, Helge Niemann, Helge Niemann

Summary

Researchers developed a fully quantitative analytical method using thermal desorption pyrolysis-GC/MS to measure nanoplastics in environmental samples, addressing the technical challenges of detecting particles present at low concentrations in complex matrices. The method provides quantitative data on nanoplastic mass concentrations in environmental samples, enabling more rigorous risk assessment.

Polymers

Nano-plastic (NP) pollution poses potential threats to both ecosystems and human health [1]. So, accurately quantifying NPs in the environment is the first action to this threat. However, due to the limited abundance of NPs, and the complexity of samples such analytical instruments still need to be developed [2-3]. Several analytical techniques were conducted to detect bigger plastic particles, microplastics, in environmental sampling using spectroscopic techniques e.g. chemical imaging [3]. However, thermo-analytical methods coupled with mass spectrometry (MS) are newly emerged analytical tools for the quantification of micro(nano)plastics in environmental samples [3]. A thermal desorption proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (TD-PTR-MS) was proposed by Materic et al [3] for the semi-quantitative analysis of nanoplastics. Our novel approach for NP quantification involves the implementation of a multivariate standard addition (MSA) protocol coupled with TD-PTR-MS, enabling a comprehensive fully quantitative analysis within environmental samples. Additionally, instead of classical signal scoring, for better mathematical isolation/separation of plastic signals from the recorded mixed mass spectra, machine learning, and data mining tools are employed for the extraction of pure nanoplastic signals. The workflow of this research is illustrated in Fig.1. The Environmental samples will be subjected to multivariate standard addition followed by TD-PTR-MS measurements. The recorded data sets will be integrated and nanoplastics signatures will be extracted using non-negative matrix factorization. Finally, a classical MSA plot indicates the exact quantity of each nanoplastic type. The developed method was used to quantify polystyrene particles (r¡ 200 nm) in water samples collected from taps, rivers, canals, ponds, and sand sample playgrounds in the Netherlands. The benefits of the proposed approach are as follows: The method is fully quantitative. The workflow can handle liquid, solid, and filtered air samples. Simultaneous determination of various nanoplastics is possible. Detection limit is in nanogram ranges Also see: https://micro2024.sciencesconf.org/556363/document

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Fully quantitative analysis of nano-plastics in environmental samples using TD-PTR-MS and multivariate standard addition

This study developed a fully quantitative method for analyzing nanoplastics in environmental samples using thermal desorption pyrolysis-GC/MS, addressing the challenge that nanoplastics are often present at low concentrations in complex matrices. The approach advances detection capabilities needed to accurately assess nanoplastic pollution in natural systems.

Article Tier 2

Analysis of polyethylene microplastics in environmental samples, using a thermal decomposition method

Researchers developed a thermal analysis method using pyrolysis-GC/MS to identify and quantify polyethylene microplastics in environmental samples without relying on visual sorting or density separation. The approach provides a more objective and automatable way to measure microplastic mass in complex environmental matrices.

Article Tier 2

Measuring nanoplastics in the atmosphere and other environmental compartments by TD-PTR-MS

Researchers developed a thermal desorption proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry method to measure nanoplastics in atmospheric samples and other environmental compartments, providing a new analytical tool for quantifying these poorly characterized ultrafine particles.

Article Tier 2

Detecting Polystyrene Nanoparticles in Environmental Samples: A Comprehensive Quantitative Approach Based on TD-PTR-MS and Multivariate Standard Addition

Scientists developed an analytical method combining thermal desorption, mass spectrometry, and multivariate statistics to accurately quantify polystyrene nanoplastics in complex environmental samples where other organic compounds can interfere with the signal. The workflow used non-negative matrix factorization to separate nanoplastic signals from background organic chemistry, enabling reliable quantification in real-world samples. Robust quantification methods for nanoplastics are a prerequisite for understanding human and environmental exposure, making this analytical advance scientifically significant.

Article Tier 2

Current techniques for identifying, quantifying, and characterizing micro and nanoplastics with emphasis on strengths, limitations, and challenges

Researchers reviewed current analytical techniques for identifying, quantifying, and characterizing micro- and nanoplastics across environmental matrices. The review highlights the strengths and limitations of methods including FTIR, Raman spectroscopy, and pyrolysis-GC/MS, and calls for standardization to improve comparability across studies.

Share this paper