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Development and validation of an analytical pyrolysis method for detection of airborne polystyrene nanoparticles

Journal of Chromatography A 2024 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Eva R. Kjærgaard, Freja Hasager, Sarah S. Petters, Freja Hasager, Þuríður Nótt Björgvinsdóttir, Eva R. Kjærgaard, Freja Hasager, Þuríður Nótt Björgvinsdóttir, Sarah S. Petters, Sofie F. Vinther, Sofie F. Vinther, Freja Hasager, Marianne Glasius Antigoni Christofili, Antigoni Christofili, Eva R. Kjærgaard, Eva R. Kjærgaard, Merete Bilde, Marianne Glasius Sarah S. Petters, Merete Bilde, Sarah S. Petters, Merete Bilde, Merete Bilde, Marianne Glasius Marianne Glasius

Summary

Scientists developed and validated a new method using thermal analysis to detect airborne polystyrene nanoparticles, which are too small for most current detection techniques. The method can measure nanoplastics at the nanogram level, enabling researchers to quantify these tiny particles in air samples. This is important for human health research because airborne nanoplastics are likely widespread but have been difficult to measure, and understanding air concentrations is essential for assessing how much people inhale.

Polymers

Microplastic is ubiquitous in the environment. Recently it was discovered that microplastic (MP, 1 μm-5 mm) contamination is present in the atmosphere where it can be transported over long distances and introduced to remote pristine environments. Sources, concentration levels, and transportation pathways of MP are still associated with large uncertainties. The abundance of atmospheric MP increases with decreasing particle size, suggesting that nanoplastics (NP, <1μm) could be of considerable atmospheric relevance. Only few analytical methods are available for detection of nanosized plastic particles. Thermoanalytical techniques are independent of particle size and are thus a powerful tool for MP and NP analysis. Here we develop a method for analysis of polystyrene on the nanogram scale using pyrolysis gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Pyrolysis was performed using a slow temperature ramp, and analytes were cryofocused prior to injection. The mass spectrometer was operated in selected ion monitoring (SIM) mode. A lower limit of detection of 1±1 ng and a lower limit of quantification of 2±2 ng were obtained (for the trimer peak). The method was validated with urban matrices of low (7 μg per sample) and high (53 μg per sample) aerosol mass loadings. The method performs well for low loadings, whereas high loadings seem to cause a matrix effect reducing the signal of polystyrene. This effect can be minimized by introducing a thermal desorption step prior to pyrolysis. The study provides a novel analysis method for qualitative and semi-quantitative analysis of PS on the nanogram scale in an aerosol matrix. Application of the method can be used to obtain concentration levels of polystyrene in atmospheric MP and NP. This is important in order to improve the understanding of the sources and sinks of MP and NP in the environment and thereby identify routes of exposure and uptake of this emerging contaminant.

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