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. Sign in to save

Aging of biodegradable-mulch-derived microplastics reduces their sorption capacity of atrazine

Environmental Pollution 2023 29 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.
Huihui Cao, Huihui Cao, Shi Yao, Li Xu, Yongrong Bian, Xin Jiang, Irmina Ćwieląg‐Piasecka, Yang Song

Summary

UV aging of biodegradable PBAT and PBST microplastics reduced their sorption capacity for the herbicide atrazine, with partition coefficients declining for both aged polymers due to changes in surface area, hydrophobicity, polarity, and crystallinity.

Degradable plastics are gradually regarded as alternatives of conventional, synthetic organic polymers to reduce the plastics or microplastics (MPs) pollution; however, the reports upon environmental risk of degradable plastics are still limited. In order to evaluate the potential vector effect of biodegradable MPs on coexisting contaminants, sorption of atrazine onto pristine and ultraviolet-aged (UV) polybutylene adipate co-terephthalate (PBAT) MPs and polybutylene succinate co-terephthalate (PBST) MPs were investigated. The results showed that, UV aging led to more wrinkles and cracks on the surface, increased homogeneous chains proportion, enhanced hydrophobicity, and enlarged crystallinity of both MPs. The sorption kinetics of atrazine to MPs fitted well into pseudo-first-order (R = 0.809-0.996) and pseudo-second-order (R = 0.889-0.994) models. In the concentration range of 0.5-25 mg L, the sorption isotherm fitted into linear (R = 0.967-0.996) and Freundlich model (R = 0.972-0.997), indicating that the absorption partitioning was the dominant sorption mechanism. The partition coefficient (K) of atrazine to PBAT- MPs (40.11-66.01 L kg) was higher than that of PBST- MPs (34.34-57.96 L kg), and the K values of both MPs declined for aged MPs. The specific surface area, hydrophobicity, polarity and crystallinity of MPs jointly interpreted the changing sorption capacity of the MPs. In the present study, both aged PBAT- and aged PBST- MPs exhibited lower vector potential to atrazine than pristine MPs, suggesting reduced risk of being a pollutant carrier, which is of great significance for the development of biodegradable plastics.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Atrazine sorption on biodegradable microplastics: Significance of microbial aging

Researchers found that soil microbial aging of biodegradable microplastics — polylactic acid (PLA) and PBAT — significantly alters their surface properties and increases their capacity to adsorb the herbicide atrazine, suggesting that biodegradable plastics may pose underappreciated pollutant-transport risks as they break down.

Article Tier 2

Effect of freeze-thaw cycle aging and high-temperature oxidation aging on the sorption of atrazine by microplastics

Researchers compared how freeze-thaw cycling and high-temperature oxidation aging affect the surface properties and atrazine adsorption of polyvinyl chloride and polyethylene microplastics. Both aging methods reduced atrazine sorption capacity through different mechanisms: freeze-thaw cycling destroyed amorphous regions of polyethylene while high-temperature oxidation introduced oxygen-containing groups on PVC that competed for adsorption sites.

Article Tier 2

Behavior and mechanism of atrazine adsorption on pristine and aged microplastics in the aquatic environment: Kinetic and thermodynamic studies

Researchers systematically explored how the pesticide atrazine adsorbs onto both pristine and aged microplastics in aquatic environments. The study found that aged microplastics had higher adsorption capacities than pristine ones, with the aging process and pH significantly affecting surface charge and adsorption behavior, suggesting that weathered microplastics may carry greater loads of chemical contaminants.

Article Tier 2

Adsorption behaviors of chlorpyrifos on UV aged microplastics

Researchers investigated how UV aging affects the adsorption of the pesticide chlorpyrifos on biodegradable and non-degradable microplastics, finding that UV irradiation significantly modified plastic surfaces and enhanced their capacity to carry organic pollutants.

Article Tier 2

Mechanistic interpretation of the sorption of terbuthylazine pesticide onto aged microplastics

Researchers investigated how accelerated weathering — using UV irradiation, hydrogen peroxide, and ultrasonic treatment — alters the surface properties of polyethylene microplastics and affects their sorption of the herbicide terbuthylazine. Aged polyethylene particles showed measurably different sorption kinetics and capacities compared to pristine particles, providing mechanistic insight into how environmental aging changes microplastic interactions with organic pollutants like pesticides.

Share this paper