0
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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Airborne transboundary microplastics–A Swirl around the globe

Environmental Pollution 2024 27 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.
Madushika Sewwandi, Meththika Vithanage Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Sayuri Dimanthi Peries, Sayuri Dimanthi Peries, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Meththika Vithanage Madushika Sewwandi, Meththika Vithanage Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Sandun Sandanayake, Meththika Vithanage Madushika Sewwandi, Madushika Sewwandi, Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Sandun Sandanayake, Sandun Sandanayake, Sandun Sandanayake, Sandun Sandanayake, Sandun Sandanayake, Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Hyun‐Han Kwon, Meththika Vithanage Madushika Sewwandi, Hyun‐Han Kwon, Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Hyun‐Han Kwon, Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage Meththika Vithanage

Summary

This review examined the growing body of research on microplastics found in the atmosphere, including their sources, transport mechanisms, and global distribution. Researchers found that clothing, vehicles, and tire materials are major sources, while polyethylene, polypropylene, and polyester fibers are the most commonly detected airborne microplastics. The study highlights that significant knowledge gaps remain about how microplastics circulate through the atmosphere and cross international boundaries.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are persistent pollutants discovered and extensively researched in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial ecosystems but have yet to receive attention in an atmospheric context. Although recent reports stated the presence of microplastics in the air, their global existence and distribution are not critically discussed to date. This review aimed to investigate the current status of research on atmospheric microplastics through bibliometric analysis and by comparing and summarising published research on global distribution. The review also provides a summary of methods that have been used to collect samples, identify microplastics, quantify their occurrence, and determine their transport mechanisms. The bibliometric analysis revealed that atmospheric microplastic studies predominantly originated in China. Clothing, vehicle, and tire materials were the major primary sources while house furniture, construction materials, landfills, urban dust, plastic recycling processes, and agricultural sludge were precursor secondary sources. Polyethylene, polypropylene, and polyethylene terephthalate microfibres have most frequently found in indoor and outdoor atmospheres. Level of urbanization and temporal or spatial distributions governs the fate of airborne microplastics, however, the knowledge gap in the retention and circulation of microplastics through the atmosphere is still large. Many challenges and limitations were identified in the methods used, presentation of data, aerodynamic processes facilitating atmospheric transport, and scarcity of research in spatially and temporally diverse contexts. The review concluded that there was a greater need for globalization of research, methods and data standardization, and emphasizes the potential for future research with atmospheric transportation modelling and thermochemical analysis.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper