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Effect of microplastics on the adherence of coexisting background organic contaminants to natural organic matter in water

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 26 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yue Yin, Huan Tang Yue Yin, Yue Yin, Ying Chen, Hangzhe Li, Hangzhe Li, Huan Tang Huan Tang Huan Tang Hangzhe Li, Yue Yin, Hangzhe Li, Yue Yin, Yue Yin, Sujie Shan, Yue Yin, Yue Yin, Tinglin Huang, Tinglin Huang, Tinglin Huang, Tinglin Huang, Tinglin Huang, Tinglin Huang, Huan Tang Huan Tang Tinglin Huang, Huan Tang

Summary

Researchers examined how microplastics affect the binding of organic contaminants (PCBs and hydroxy PCBs) to humic acid in water, finding that microplastics caused contaminants to migrate from humic acid to plastic surfaces. This redistribution effect could alter the bioavailability and environmental risk of co-occurring organic pollutants.

Microplastics (MPs) may interact with background organic substances (including natural organic matter and organic pollutants) after entering the aquatic environment and affect their original binding. Thus, the interaction of MPs with background organic substances (i.e., humic acid (HA), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and hydroxy PCBs) were elucidated. According to the results, PCB and hydroxy PCB displayed a strong propensity to adhere to HAs in the absence of MPs. However, the PCBs and hydroxy PCBs that were initially bound to HAs shifted from HAs to MPs in the presence of MPs. Further analysis demonstrated that this transfer was dominated by van der Waals interactions, with hydrogen bond interactions as an additional driving force. Upon the interaction, large MPs-HA-PCB/ hydroxy PCB aggregates with MPs as the core and HAs as the outermost layer were formed. Significant changes in the properties of background organic matter, including the distribution of PCB/hydroxy PCB around HA, diffusion coefficient, and hydrogen bond networks in the HA-PCB/ hydroxy PCB domains, occurred during the MP-HA-PCB/hydroxy PCB interaction. These results provide molecular-level evidence that the intrusion of MPs changes the binding preference of background organic pollutants and can lead to a redistribution of background organic pollutants.

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