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New Insights into the Formation of Aggregates of Bidisperse Nano- and Microplastics in Water Based on the Analysis of In Situ Microscopy and Molecular Simulation

Langmuir 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Christian B. Hammond, Abolfazl Faeli Qadikolae, Mohammadreza Aghaaminiha, Sumit Sharma, Lei Wu

Summary

Researchers combined microscopy and molecular simulations to study how nano- and microplastic particles of different sizes clump together in water. They found that mixing particle sizes delays the onset of rapid aggregation but does not change the overall growth pattern. The findings help explain how plastic particles behave in salty water like oceans and wastewater, which is important for designing effective removal strategies.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) and nanoplastics (NPs) in water pose a global threat to human health and the environment. To develop efficient removal strategies, it is crucial to understand how these particles behave as they aggregate. However, our knowledge of the process of aggregate formation from primary particles of different sizes is limited. In this study, we analyzed the growth kinetics and structures of aggregates formed by polystyrene MPs in mono- and bidisperse systems using in situ microscopy and image analysis. Our findings show that the scaling behavior of aggregate growth remains unaffected by the primary particle size distribution, but it does delay the onset of rapid aggregation. We also performed a structural analysis that reveals the power law dependence of aggregate fractal dimension (df) in both mono- and bidisperse systems, with mean df consistent with diffusion-limited cluster aggregation (DLCA) aggregates. Our results also suggest that the df of aggregates is insensitive to the shape anisotropy. We simulated molecular forces driving aggregation of polystyrene NPs of different sizes under high ionic strength conditions. These conditions represent salt concentration in ocean water and wastewater, where the DLVO theory does not apply. Our simulation results show that the aggregation tendency of the NPs increases with the ionic strength. The increase in the aggregation is caused by the depletion of clusters of ions from the NPs surface.

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