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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. Food & Water Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Sign in to save

EchoGrid: High-Throughput Acoustic Trapping for Enrichment of Environmental Microplastics

Analytical Chemistry 2024 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Martim Costa, Martim Costa, Martim Costa, Selim Tanriverdi, Selim Tanriverdi, Martim Costa, Liselotte van der Geer, Liselotte van der Geer, Liselotte van der Geer, Liselotte van der Geer, Bjorn Hammarström, Liselotte van der Geer, Aman Russom Martim Costa, Liselotte van der Geer, Bjorn Hammarström, Selim Tanriverdi, Selim Tanriverdi, Bjorn Hammarström, Haakan N. Joensson, Selim Tanriverdi, Haakan N. Joensson, Martim Costa, Martin Wiklund, Martin Wiklund, Haakan N. Joensson, Aman Russom Martin Wiklund, Martin Wiklund, Aman Russom Aman Russom Aman Russom Aman Russom

Summary

Engineers developed the EchoGrid, a device that uses sound waves to capture and concentrate microplastics from large water samples for easier detection. The device can process drinking water and environmental samples much faster than existing methods, which is important because microplastics are often present at low concentrations that require large sample volumes to detect. Better detection tools like this are essential for understanding how much microplastic contamination exists in the water people drink.

Study Type Environmental

The health hazards of micro- and nanoplastic contaminants in drinking water has recently emerged as an area of concern to policy makers and industry. Plastic contaminants range in size from micro- (5 mm to 1 μm) to nanoplastics (<1 μm). Microfluidics provides many tools for particle manipulation at the microscale, particularly in diagnostics and biomedicine, but has in general a limited capacity to process large volumes. Drinking water and environmental samples with low-level contamination of microplastics require processing of deciliter to liter sample volumes to achieve statistically relevant particle counts. Here, we introduce the EchoGrid, an acoustofluidics device for high throughput continuous flow particle enrichment into a robust array of particle clusters. The EchoGrid takes advantage of highly efficient particle capture through the integration of a micropatterned transducer for surface displacement-based acoustic trapping in a glass and polymer microchannel. Silica seed particles were used as anchor particles to improve capture performance at low particle concentrations and high flow rates. The device was able to maintain the silica grids at a flow rate of 50 mL/min. In terms of enrichment, the device is able to double the final pellet's microplastic concentration every 78 s for 23 μm particles and every 51 s for 10 μm particles at a flow rate of 5 mL/min. In conclusion, we demonstrate the usefulness of the EchoGrid by capturing microplastics in challenging conditions, such as large sample volumes with low microparticle concentrations, without sacrificing the potential of integration with downstream analysis for environmental monitoring.

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