Accelerated fragmentation of two thermoplastics (polylactic acid and polypropylene) into microplastics after UV radiation and seawater immersion
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety2024
21 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 65
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Zhiyue Niu,
Gert Everaert
Ana I. Catarino,
Jana Asselman,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Marco Curto,
Zhiyue Niu,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Peter Davies,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Zhiyue Niu,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Marco Curto,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Hom Nath Dhakal,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Zhiyue Niu,
Jana Asselman,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Ana I. Catarino,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Ana I. Catarino,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Marco Curto,
Colin Janssen,
Zhiyue Niu,
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Zhiyue Niu,
Ana I. Catarino,
Peter Davies,
Gert Everaert
Peter Davies,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Peter Davies,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Marco Curto,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Elke Demeyer,
Gert Everaert
Maelenn Le Gall,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Maelenn Le Gall,
Peter Davies,
Marco Curto,
Elke Demeyer,
Elke Demeyer,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Maelenn Le Gall,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Jana Asselman,
Peter Davies,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Hom Nath Dhakal,
Hom Nath Dhakal,
Hom Nath Dhakal,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Ana I. Catarino,
Ana I. Catarino,
Colin Janssen,
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Peter Davies,
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Jana Asselman,
Jana Asselman,
Colin Janssen,
Gert Everaert
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Peter Davies,
Colin Janssen,
Ana I. Catarino,
Hom Nath Dhakal,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Jana Asselman,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Colin Janssen,
Jana Asselman,
Ana I. Catarino,
Gert Everaert
Gert Everaert
Summary
Researchers exposed two types of plastic -- polylactic acid (PLA, a "bio-based" plastic) and polypropylene (PP, a petroleum-based plastic) -- to UV radiation in seawater to see how quickly they fragment into microplastics. PP released up to nine times more microplastic particles than PLA after simulated exposure equivalent to about two years of European sunlight. This suggests that while no plastic is immune to fragmentation, switching to bio-based plastics could reduce the rate of microplastic generation in marine environments.
To better understand the fate and assess the ingestible fraction of microplastics (by aquatic organisms), it is essential to quantify and characterize of their released from larger items under environmental realistic conditions. However, the current information on the fragmentation and size-based characteristics of released microplastics, for example from bio-based thermoplastics, is largely unknown. The goal of our work was to assess the fragmentation and release of microplastics, under ultraviolet (UV) radiation and in seawater, from polylactic acid (PLA) items, a bio-based polymer, and from polypropylene (PP) items, a petroleum-based polymer. To do so, we exposed pristine items of PLA and PP, immersed in filtered natural seawater, to accelerated UV radiation for 57 and 76 days, simulating 18 and 24 months of mean natural solar irradiance in Europe. Our results indicated that 76-day UV radiation induced the fragmentation of parent plastic items and the microplastics (50 - 5000 µm) formation from both PP and PLA items. The PP samples (48 ± 26 microplastics / cm<sup>2</sup>) released up to nine times more microplastics than PLA samples (5 ± 2 microplastics / cm<sup>2</sup>) after a 76-day UV exposure, implying that the PLA tested items had a lower fragmentation rate than PP. The particles' length of released microplastics was parameterized using a power law exponent (α), to assess their size distribution. The obtained α values were 3.04 ± 0.11 and 2.54 ± 0.06 (-) for 76-day UV weathered PP and PLA, respectively, meaning that PLA microplastics had a larger sized microplastics fraction than PP particles. With respect to their two-dimensional shape, PLA microplastics also had lower width-to-length ratio (0.51 ± 0.17) and greater fiber-shaped fractions (16%) than PP microplastics (0.57 ± 0.17% and 11%, respectively). Overall, the bio-based PLA items under study were more resistant to fragmentation and release of microplastics than the petroleum-based PP tested items, and the parameterized characteristics of released microplastics were polymer-dependent. Our work indicates that even though bio-based plastics may have a slower release of fragmented particles under UV radiation compared to conventional polymer types, they still have the potential to act as a source of microplastics in the marine environment, with particles being available to biota within ingestible size fractions, if not removed before major fragmentation processes.