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

Influence of microplastic occurrence on complex conductivity of river sediments

2024
Shuai Li, Mingsa Xu, Yumeng Peng, Xiangyun Hu

Summary

Researchers used an improved sand column experimental setup to examine how microplastics of varying particle sizes affect the electrical conductivity, electrokinetic properties, and wettability of Yangtze River bank sediments, finding that increasing MP mass fraction decreased electrical conductivity while increasing permeability.

Study Type Environmental

This study utilized an improved sand column experimental setup to investigate the effects of microplastic on Yangtze River bank sediments. The experiments conducted included Darcy experiments, electrokinetic experiments, and wettability experiments, together for the same sample. By varying the particle size of the microplastics in the samples, we were able to observe different response of the electrical properties as well as hydrogeophysical parameters in the samples.Results show that increasing the mass fraction of mixed microplastics generally resulted in a significant decrease in sample electrical conductivity associated with an increase in permeability. These were expected to be due to the weak conductivity and strong hydrophobic properties of plastic particles, as well as the small adhesive forces between particles, which increased the pore space of the sediments and ultimately increased permeability. However, an anomalous increase trend was observed when decreasing the particle size of the mixed microplastics. Under this condition, increasing the concentration of same size plastic particles enhanced the electrical conductivity of the sediment sample. This anomaly phenomenon was reflected in both permeability and wettability, resulting in a decrease in sample permeability and a significant increase in sample hydrophobicity. Our observations using optical microscopy revealed two types of microplastic distribution in the sediments: one case was that microplastic particles were distributed within sediment pores and they did not touch each other, the other was that they were adsorbed onto sediment particle surfaces. We hypothesized that changes in the existence form of microplastics altered the double-layer structure of sediments, ultimately changing their hydrogeophysical parameters. This work has significance and relevance for electromagnetic-based characterization of microplastic-filled porous materials; for example, estimation of microplastic abundance in sediments.

Share this paper