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Microplastic generation from field-collected plastic gauze: Unveiling the aging processes

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 37 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Jing Gao, Liuwei Wang, Wei‐Min Wu, Jian Luo, Deyi Hou

Summary

Researchers aged high-density polyethylene plastic gauze through freeze-thaw cycles, mechanical abrasion, and UV irradiation, finding that aged plastic released up to 334 million microplastic particles per square meter during rinsing — two orders of magnitude more than unaged plastic — with UV and abrasion generating unusual sphere and fiber morphologies.

Polymers

Accumulation of plastic debris in the environment is a matter of global concern. As plastic ages, it generates microplastic (MP) particles with high mobility. Understanding how MPs are generated is crucial to controlling this emerging contaminant. In this study, we utilized high-density polyethylene (HDPE) plastic gauze, collected from urban settings, as a representative example of plastic waste. The plastic gauze was subjected to various aging conditions, including freeze-thaw cycling, mechanical abrasion, and UV irradiation. Following aging, the plastic gauze was rinsed with water, and the number of generated MPs were quantified. It was found that aged plastic gauze generated up to 334 million MP particles per m (> 10 µm) during rinsing, a number two orders of magnitude higher than unaged plastic. Fragmentation occurred in two dimensions for bulk MPs of all morphotypes. However, specific aging approaches (i.e., mechanical abrasion and UV irradiation) generated spheres and fibers via pseudo-3D fragmentation. Additionally, changes in molecular weight, size distribution, and surface oxidation characteristics unveiled a complex pattern (i.e., irregular changes with exposure time). This complexity underscores the intricate nature of plastic debris aging processes in the environment.

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