0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Remediation Sign in to save

Polyethylene microplastic can adsorb phosphate but is unlikely to limit its availability in soil

Heliyon 2023 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.
Tazeen Fatima Khan, Mark E. Hodson

Summary

Researchers tested whether polyethylene microplastics can adsorb phosphate, a key plant nutrient, and found that while adsorption does occur, it is substantially weaker than phosphate binding to soil. The study compared pristine and UV-weathered microplastics across various pH and ionic strength conditions. Evidence indicates that even at concentrations much higher than those found in agricultural fields, microplastics are unlikely to significantly reduce phosphate availability to plants.

Polymers

In plant growth experiments, the presence of microplastics (MPs) often reduces plant growth. We conducted laboratory experiments to investigate the potential of microplastics to adsorb the major soil nutrient phosphate; adsorption to MPs was then compared to adsorption to soil. Adsorption experiments used two contrasting soils, pristine high density polyethylene and artificially weathered material (the same material but exposed to 185 nm UV light for 420 h over 105 days), phosphate solutions (dissolved KH2PO4) ranging from 0.2 to 200 mg L-1 and a solid (g) to liquid (mL) ratio of 1: 150 at different values of pH (2-12) and different concentrations of background electrolyte (0.00-0.10 M NaNO3). The adsorption data were best fitted to linear and Freundlich isotherms. In initial experiments where pH was not fixed and with a background electrolyte of 0.10 M NaNO3, Kd values ranged from 3.37 to 27.65 L kg-1, log Kf from 1.21 to 1.96 and 1/n from 0.36 to 0.84. Exposure of the MP to 185 nm UV radiation led to the appearance of a C=O functional group in the MP; the partition coefficient Kd, calculated from the linear isotherm did not increase but the logKf value derived from fits to the Freundlich isotherm increased by a factor of 1.5. Kd values for soils were 3-7.5 times greater than those for MPs and log Kf values 1.1-1.7 greater. In the experiments in which initial pH and ionic strength were varied, adsorption was similar across all treatments with adsorption parameters for the higher organic content soil sometimes having the highest values and the pristine microplastic the lowest. In the desorption experiments most of the adsorbed phosphate desorbed. Overall our findings indicate that despite their ability to adsorb phosphate, MPs are unlikely to control the fate and behaviour of phosphate in soil.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastics Influence Phosphate Adsorption in Volcanic Ash Soil

Researchers found that adding polyethylene microplastics to volcanic ash soil slightly increased the soil's ability to hold phosphorus but also made phosphorus easier to wash away, potentially reducing its availability to plants. This suggests microplastic contamination in farmland soils could quietly alter nutrient cycling in ways that affect crop growth.

Article Tier 2

Effects of microplastic properties and dissolved organic matter on phosphorus availability in soil and aqueous mediums

Researchers studied how different types of microplastics from agricultural mulching films affect phosphorus availability in soil and water. They found that both conventional plastics like polyethylene and biodegradable plastics like polylactic acid significantly reduced available phosphorus in soil, with smaller and more concentrated particles causing the greatest reductions. The study suggests that microplastic accumulation in agricultural soils may impair nutrient availability for crops.

Article Tier 2

Short-term effects of polyethene and polypropylene microplastics on soil phosphorus and nitrogen availability

Researchers examined the short-term effects of polyethylene and polypropylene microplastics on soil nutrient cycling, finding that these particles can alter the availability of phosphorus and nitrogen depending on microplastic size and fertilization conditions.

Article Tier 2

Discrepant effects of microplastics on soil phosphorus availability under different phosphorus fertilizer applications

Researchers studied how polyethylene and polylactic acid microplastics interact with different types of phosphorus fertilizers in soil over 56 days. They found that microplastics reduced the amount of plant-available phosphorus in organically fertilized soils by up to 29%, while increasing it in soils treated with mineral fertilizer. The findings suggest that microplastic contamination in farmland could alter how effectively crops access essential nutrients depending on the fertilizer type used.

Article Tier 2

Research on the Effect of Microplastics on Phosphorus in Soil and Water Environment

This review synthesizes research on how microplastics interact with phosphorus in soil and water environments, finding that adsorption capacity varies with particle size and polymer type, that aging increases adsorption, and that microplastic-phosphorus complexes alter phosphorus migration and bioavailability in ecosystems.

Share this paper