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Extraction and decontamination of microplastics from high organic matter soils: A simple, cost-saving and high efficient method

Journal of Environmental Management 2023 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shaoliang Zhang Shaoliang Zhang Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang Shaoliang Zhang Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang Shaoliang Zhang Shaoliang Zhang Shaoliang Zhang Xinhua Hao, Pengke Yan, Xinhua Hao, Shaoliang Zhang Shaoliang Zhang Pengke Yan, Pengke Yan, Pengke Yan, Shaoliang Zhang Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Pengke Yan, Xinhua Hao, Pengke Yan, Xinhua Hao, Xinhua Hao, Shaoliang Zhang Xinhua Hao, Shaoliang Zhang

Summary

Researchers developed and validated an optimized method to extract microplastics from organic-rich soils, finding that zinc chloride flotation combined with a dilute sulfuric acid-hydrogen peroxide digestion achieves 96-102% microplastic recovery while preserving the plastic particles intact. This practical, low-cost protocol fills an important methodological gap for studying microplastic contamination in agricultural soils where high organic matter typically interferes with detection.

This article introduces a simple, cost-saving and high efficient for the extraction and separation of microplastics (MPs) from soil with a high organic matter (SOM) content. In this study, MP with particle sizes of 154-600 μm of polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS), polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) were artificially added into the five Mollisols with the high SOM. Three flotation solutions were used to extract these MPs from soils, and four digestion solutions were used to digest the SOM. As well, their destruction effects on MPs were also examined. The results showed that the flotation recovery rates of PE, PP, PS, PVC and PET were 96.1%-99.0% by ZnCl solution, while were 102.0%-107.2% by rapeseed oil, were 100.0%-104.7% by soybean oil. The digestion rate of SOM was 89.3% by HSO:HO (1:40, v:v) at 70 °C for 48 h, and this was higher than by HO (30%), NaOH and Fenton's reagent. However, the digestion rate of PE, PP, PS, PVC and PET were 0.0%-0.54% by HSO:HO (1:40, v:v), and this was lower than by HO (30%), NaOH and Fenton's reagent. As well, the factors influencing on MP extraction was also discussed. Generally, the best flotation solution was ZnCl (ρ > 1.6 g cm) and the best digestion method was HSO:HO (1:40, v:v) at 70 °C for 48 h. The optimal extraction and digestion method were verified by the known concentrations of MPs (recovery rate of MPs was 95.7-101.7%), and this method was also used to extract MPs from long-term mulching vegetable fields in Mollisols of Northeast China.

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