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The power of centrifugation: How to extract microplastics from soil with high recovery and matrix removal efficiency

MethodsX 2024 13 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.
Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Christian Roth, Christian Roth, Christian Roth, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Christian Roth, Wendel Wohlleben Christian Roth, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben

Summary

This study developed and validated a centrifugation-based method for extracting microplastics from soil samples with high recovery and efficient removal of organic matter. The approach is particularly useful for monitoring the fragmentation and biodegradation of both conventional and biodegradable polymers released into agricultural soils.

Understanding the occurrence and transformation of microplastics when released into the environment is essential for risk assessment. The use of biodegradable polymers in agriculture can help to reduce microplastic accumulation in soil, since released fragments of such materials are not persistent and are further transformed into CO<sub>2</sub> and biomass (Wohlleben et al., 2023). To be able to monitor the fragmentation and biodegradation of these materials in soil, a validated extraction protocol is needed, which does not induce changes in the chemical and particle properties, additionally it should show high recoveries and matrix removal efficiency. A density-based extraction method in the centrifuge has the potential to remove a high amount of the soil matrix and is very selective for the polymer at the same time. Here we developed an efficient and non-destructive extraction protocol for biodegradable fragments from different soils using sequential centrifugation steps with varying densities and a freezing approach for sample collection. Although the focus of the present study was on biodegradable fragments, the technique can also be used for other types of microplastics with similar or lower density than the one tested for the method validation, but additional recovery tests for the target analyte are recommended.•A density-based extraction method for microplastics from soil, validated by recovery and stability tests using biodegradable polymers•Vessel changes and harsh chemical treatments are kept to a minimum.

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