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A method for the extraction of microplastics from solid biowastes including biosolids, compost, and soil for analysis by µ-FTIR

MethodsX 2024 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Helena Ruffell, Olga Pantos, Brett Robinson, Sally Gaw

Summary

Researchers developed and validated a method for extracting microplastics from solid organic materials including biosolids, compost, and soil for analysis by micro-FTIR spectroscopy. The approach combines wet peroxide oxidation with sequential density separations to isolate plastic particles from complex organic matrices. The method provides a reliable protocol for researchers studying how microplastics move through and accumulate in agricultural and waste management systems.

Study Type Environmental

Few methods exist detailing the extraction of microplastics from organic matrices. A validated method for the successful extraction of microplastics from solid biowastes including biosolids, compost, and soil for spectroscopic analysis by micro-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (µ-FTIR) was developed. Solid dry biowastes were first digested with a wet peroxide oxidation (WPO) with iron (II) solution and 30% hydrogen peroxide followed by sequential density separations with ultra-pure water and 1.8 g cm NaI in an optimised sediment-microplastic isolation (SMI) unit. The average recoveries for spiked microplastics were 92, 95 and 98% for bagged compost, biosolids, and soil, respectively. This method ensures a high microplastic recovery by first chemically disintegrating biowaste aggregates without employing destructive methods like milling and allows for successful density separations where the settled fraction is isolated off from the supernatant, allowing thorough rinsing of the equipment and thus a greater transferal of particles into the vacuum filtering device. Minimal processing steps reduce the instance of introducing contamination and particle loss.•Digestion as a first step to disintegrate aggregates to release entrapped microplastics•Density separation with SMI unit with the method adapted for biowastes•Minimal steps to reduce contamination and particle loss.

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