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Fractionating microplastics by density gradient centrifugation: a novel approach using LuerLock syringes in a low-cost density gradient maker

Chemistry Teacher International 2024 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Alina Majcen, Jan Gohla, Anna S. Steinhoff, Lena Meißner, Sebastian Tassoti, Philipp Spitzer

Summary

Researchers developed a low-cost, do-it-yourself density gradient centrifugation setup using standard syringes to separate and identify microplastic particles by their polymer-specific densities. This affordable method can effectively fractionate common plastics like polyamide, PET, PVC, and polyurethane, making microplastic analysis accessible even to school laboratories.

Abstract Microplastics are now ubiquitous in the environment and are even considered “technofossils” of the Anthropocene. Given their omnipresence and potential impact, identifying and analyzing these particles becomes increasingly crucial. Novel approaches suggest density gradient centrifugation for simultaneous extraction and fractionation of microplastic particles based on their plastic-specific densities. In this article we describe a cheap and harmless experimental setting to fractionate microplastic particles by density gradient centrifugation. An innovative low-cost Do-It-Yourself (DIY) gradient maker using Luer-Lock syringes is presented. With this gradient maker it is possible to produce density gradients with water and sucrose solutions, covering a density range of 1.00–1.32 g/cm 3 , as well as with water and saturated potassium carbonate solutions, covering a density range of 1.06–1.53 g/cm 3 . The separation performance was tested with the most broadly used plastics polyamide, polyurethane, polycarbonate, polyethylene terephthalate and polyvinylchloride. Both density gradients show centrifugation stability and clear banding patterns after centrifugation. Due to its cheap and easy-to-build-easy-to-use nature, this experimental setting for microplastic fractionation by density gradient centrifugation offers an approach for schools not only to address the microplastic problems, but also to integrate new methods of microplastic analysis in upper secondary school laboratories.

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