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. Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Preconcentration of nanoplastics using micro-electromembrane extraction across free liquid membranes

Advances in Sample Preparation 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Muhandiramge Ranasinghe, Michael C. Breadmore, Fernando Maya

Summary

Researchers developed a miniaturized electrical extraction technique that concentrates nanoplastics from liquid samples across a thin oil membrane using an electric field, then analyzes them using capillary electrophoresis. The method achieved over 20-fold concentration of nanoplastics in just 5 minutes and successfully removed interfering compounds from tea samples, offering a fast and sensitive tool for detecting nanoplastics in complex real-world liquids.

Asymmetric micro-electromembrane extraction (µ-EME) based on a free liquid membrane has been evaluated for the preconcentration of nanoplastics. A conical unit (200 µL micropipette tip) enabled the simple and reproducible formation of the required three-phase extraction system consisting of a donor solution (150 µL sample/standard solution), free liquid membrane (FLM; 10 µL 1-pentanol), and an acceptor solution (5 µL of 5 mM phosphate buffer, pH 10.7). After µ-EME, nanoplastics transferred across the FLM into the acceptor solution were quantified using capillary zone electrophoresis with diode array detection. Enrichment factors >20 and extraction recoveries >70 % were achieved for nanoplastics concentrated at 500 V during 5 min. The limit of detection (LOD, S/N = 3) and limit of quantification (LOQ, S/N = 10) of the method using 200 nm sulphonated polystyrene particles as model nanoplastics were 6.00×10−4% (w/v) and 2.00×10−3% (w/v), respectively. Intraday (n = 6) and interday (n = 6) repeatability%RSD for 5.5 × 10−3% (w/v) nanoplastics were 8.5 % and 7.2 %, respectively. µ-EME enabled an efficient sample matrix clean-up and preconcentration of nanoplastics spiked in tea sample matrices. Nanoplastics preconcentrated through the FLM for black tea resulted in an enrichment factor of 20±3.6 (n = 3), with complete sample matrix removal of UV absorbing compounds.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Nanoplastic Sample Cleanup by Micro-Electromembrane Extraction across Free Liquid Membranes

Researchers applied micro-electromembrane extraction across a free liquid membrane to clean up and separate nanoplastic particles from complex sample matrices, using sulfonated polystyrene beads as a model system. At 700 V, efficient nanoplastic transfer was achieved, demonstrating the method's potential for environmental sample preparation.

Article Tier 2

Determination of Nanoplastics Using a Novel Contactless Conductivity Detector with Controllable Geometric Parameters

Researchers developed a novel contactless conductivity detection method for capillary electrophoresis that enables sensitive quantification of nanoplastic particles in environmental samples, offering a simpler alternative to existing nanoplastic detection techniques.

Article Tier 2

A new approach in separating microplastics from environmental samples based on their electrostatic behavior

Researchers developed a novel electrostatic separation method to isolate microplastics from environmental matrices based on differences in electrostatic behavior between plastic particles and natural materials. The technique offers a low-cost, chemical-free approach to microplastic extraction that could complement or replace existing density separation methods in some applications.

Article Tier 2

Simple microfluidic device for simultaneous extraction and detection of microplastics in water using DC electrical signal

A simple microfluidic device using a DC electric field between two microwires in a straight channel was developed to simultaneously extract and detect microplastics from water via electrophoretic accumulation. The compact design offers a rapid, low-cost approach to microplastic monitoring.

Article Tier 2

Surface nanodroplet-based nanoextraction from sub-milliliter volumes of dense suspensions

Scientists developed a rapid micro-extraction technique using tiny surface droplets that can concentrate trace chemicals from very small sample volumes. This analytical method could be adapted for detecting microplastic-associated chemicals in water and environmental samples.

Share this paper