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Shape Matters: Long-Range Transport of Microplastic Fibers in the Atmosphere

Environmental Science & Technology 2023 111 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Silvia Bucci, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Daria Tatsii, Silvia Bucci, Daria Tatsii, Silvia Bucci, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Silvia Bucci, Daria Tatsii, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Silvia Bucci, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Daria Tatsii, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Daria Tatsii, Silvia Bucci, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Lucie Bakels, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Lucie Bakels, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Taraprasad Bhowmick, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl Johannes Guettler, Silvia Bucci, A. Stohl A. Stohl Silvia Bucci, A. Stohl Silvia Bucci, A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl Gholamhossein Bagheri, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Johannes Guettler, Johannes Guettler, Johannes Guettler, Johannes Guettler, Johannes Guettler, A. Stohl A. Stohl Gholamhossein Bagheri, Lucie Bakels, A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl Lucie Bakels, Lucie Bakels, Silvia Bucci, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Gholamhossein Bagheri, Silvia Bucci, A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl Gholamhossein Bagheri, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, Silvia Bucci, A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl A. Stohl

Summary

Researchers used atmospheric modeling to explain how microplastic fibers can travel long distances through the air, even reaching remote locations far from population centers. They found that the elongated shape of fibers gives them significantly different aerodynamic properties than spherical particles, allowing them to stay airborne much longer. The study helps explain why microplastics have been detected in pristine environments like mountain peaks and polar regions.

The deposition of airborne microplastic particles, including those exceeding 1000 μm in the longest dimension, has been observed in the most remote places on earth. However, their deposition patterns are difficult to reproduce using current atmospheric transport models. These models usually treat particles as perfect spheres, whereas the real shapes of microplastic particles are often far from spherical. Such particles experience lower settling velocities compared to volume equivalent spheres, leading to longer atmospheric transport. Here, we present novel laboratory experiments on the gravitational settling of microplastic fibers in air and find that their settling velocities are reduced by up to 76% compared to those of the spheres of the same volume. An atmospheric transport model constrained with the experimental data shows that shape-corrected settling velocities significantly increase the horizontal and vertical transport of particles. Our model results show that microplastic fibers of about 1 mm length emitted in populated areas are more likely to reach extremely remote regions of the globe, including the high Arctic, which is not the case for spheres of equivalent volume. We also calculate that fibers with lengths of up to 100 μm settle slowly enough to be lifted high into the stratosphere, where degradation by ultraviolet radiation may release chlorine and bromine, thus potentially damaging the stratospheric ozone layer. These findings suggest that the growing environmental burden and still increasing emissions of plastic pose multiple threats to life on earth.

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