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Investigating the distribution of microplastics in soils from e-waste dismantling sites and their adsorption of heavy metals

Waste Management & Research The Journal for a Sustainable Circular Economy 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Xuewen Wu, Weihua Gu, Shengjuan Peng, Shengjuan Peng, Jianfeng Bai, Jianfeng Bai

Summary

Researchers studied microplastic distribution in soils at electronic waste dismantling sites and examined how those microplastics absorb heavy metals. They found that microplastic abundance was significantly higher in contaminated soils near e-waste facilities, and that different plastic types varied in their capacity to adsorb metals like copper, lead, and cadmium. The findings suggest that microplastics in e-waste contaminated soils may act as carriers that spread heavy metal pollution through the environment.

Microplastics are characterized by strong hydrophobicity, large specific surface area. In addition to the pollutant they contain, the heavy metals adsorbed on the surface of microplastics can migrate or be transformed with them into the environmental medium, which is potentially harmful to humans. The distribution characteristics of microplastics in contaminated soil at the e-waste dismantling site were studied. The study investigated the adsorption characteristics of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polypropylene (PP) and acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) on copper (Cu), zinc (Zn) and lead (Pb). It analysed the influence of various factors on the adsorption process of heavy metals, the adsorption law of microplastics on some of the heavy metals in the environment, and the risk of heavy metal release from microplastics to soil. The results showed that ABS and PP were the main microplastics in the contaminated soil. Among them, black, white and transparent microplastics accounted for 89.91%. The shape of microplastics is mainly granular, and microplastics with a particle size of 1-2 mm accounted for the largest proportion. Further studies showed that plastic particles made of ABS, PP and PVC also have the adsorption capacity for different types of heavy metals in soil, and the trends of adsorption capacity are: PP>PVC>ABS. When PP does not reach adsorption equilibrium in the adsorption process, the smaller the particle size and the more added amount, the greater the adsorption capacity. This is because the smaller the particle size of the microplastic is, the more adsorption points it can provide, increasing its ability to adsorb heavy metal ions.

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