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Attachment of various-shaped polystyrene microplastics to silica surfaces: Experimental validation of the equivalent Cassini oval extended DLVO model
Summary
Researchers experimentally studied the attachment of differently shaped polystyrene microplastics — spheres, fibres, and fragments — to silica surfaces under varying ionic strength and pH conditions. Particle shape strongly influenced attachment rate and strength, with fibres showing higher attachment efficiency than spheres due to greater contact area, with implications for predicting microplastic fate in porous soils and sediments.
Microplastics (MPs) vary in shape and surface characteristics in the environment. The attachment of MPs to surfaces can be studied using the Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory. However, this theory does not account for the shape MPs. Therefore, we investigated the attachment of spherical, pear-shaped, and peanut-shaped polystyrene MPs to quartz sand in NaCl and CaCl solutions using batch tests. The attachment of MPs to quartz sand was quantified using the attachment efficiency (alpha). Subsequently, alpha behaviors were interpreted using energy barriers (EBs) and interaction minima obtained from extended DLVO calculations, which were performed using an equivalent sphere model (ESM) and a newly developed equivalent Cassini model (ECM) to account for the shape of the MPs. The ESM failed to interpret the alpha behavior of the three MP shapes because it predicted high EBs and shallow minima. The alpha values for spherical MPs (0.62-1.00 in NaCl and 0.48-0.96 in CaCl) were higher than those for pear- and peanut-shaped MPs (0.01-0.63 in NaCl and 0.02-0.46 in CaCl, and 0.01-0.59 in NaCl and 0.02-0.40 in CaCl, respectively). Conversely, the ECM could interpret the alpha behavior of pear- and peanut-shaped MPs either by changes in EBs or interaction minima as a function of orientation angles and electrolyte ionic strength. Therefore, the particle shape must be considered to improve the attachment analyses.
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