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Validation of an FT-IR microscopy method for the monitorization of microplastics in water for human consumption in Portugal: Lisbon case study

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2024 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Rodrigo D. M. Cordeiro, Rodrigo D. M. Cordeiro, Rodrigo D. M. Cordeiro, Rodrigo D. M. Cordeiro, Vítor Vale Cardoso, Vítor Vale Cardoso, Rui Neves Carneiro, Rui Neves Carneiro, Cristina Almeida Cristina Almeida

Summary

Researchers validated a method using infrared microscopy to monitor microplastics in drinking water and applied it to 60 tap water samples from Lisbon, Portugal. They detected microplastics in most samples, with an average of 309 particles per liter, predominantly polyethylene fragments averaging 76 micrometers in length. The study provides one of the first standardized approaches for routine microplastic monitoring in public water supplies, an important step for assessing human exposure.

Study Type Environmental

The growing anthropogenic contamination of natural water by microplastics (MPs) confirms the urgent need to preserve this precious resource. MPs are part of the group of contaminants of emerging concern, and the occurrence studies in surface water and water for human consumption (WHC) are mandatory for environmental and human health risk assessment. This study aims to optimize and validate a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy method coupled with optical microscopy (micro-FTIR) in transmission mode to monitor MPs in WHC. Water sample (250 mL; without sample pre-treatment) was filtered through 5 µm silicon filters. The infrared spectra identification was performed by OMNIC mathematical correlation, using various spectra libraries for polymers (including the in-house IR spectra library), a background reading on a clean silicon filter, and an aperture of 100 µm × 100 µm. The validated method showed good accuracy, with an average recovery for representative polymers of 91%, a relative standard deviation of 13%, and a reporting limit (RL) of 44 MPs/L. Sixty WHC samples from the Lisbon water supply system showed MPs ranging from 0 (< RL) to 934 MPs/L, with an average value of 309 MPs/L. The most representative polymers were polyethylene (PE, 76.8%), polyethylene terephthalate (PET, 6.9%), polypropylene (PP, 6%), polystyrene (PS, 4%), and polyamide (PA,4%). In terms of size, the microplastic particles had an average length and width of 76 µm and 39 µm, respectively.

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