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Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Dots Derived from Onion Peel (Allium cepa) for Fluorescence-Based Detection of Microplastics

2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ma. Sofia Sam Pintoy, Ma. Sofia Sam Pintoy, Fayeeh Joy Dabalus, Fayeeh Joy Dabalus, Rugi Vicente C. Rubi Joemari Voluntad, Carlou Eguico, Carlou Eguico, Joemari Voluntad, Carlou Eguico, Allan N. Soriano, Rugi Vicente C. Rubi Allan N. Soriano, Nathaniel P. Dugos, Rugi Vicente C. Rubi Nathaniel P. Dugos, Rugi Vicente C. Rubi Rugi Vicente C. Rubi

Summary

Researchers synthesized fluorescent nitrogen-doped carbon dots from onion peel and used them to detect high-density and low-density polyethylene microplastics, finding that the particles produced excitation-dependent fluorescence that enabled selective detection of both plastic types.

Microplastics, plastic particles smaller than 5 mm, are now ubiquitous and represent a form of pollution that threatens ecosystems and human health, infiltrating the environment, air, and food chain. The search for solutions to microplastics requires industrial policies that limit plastic production and technological innovations for removal and recycling. Specifically, this paper reports a sustainable and cost-effective method for the detection of high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and low-density polyethylene (LDPE) microplastics using nitrogen-doped carbon dots (N-CD) synthesized from onion peel and L-cysteine via hydrothermal carbonization. Two precursor ratios (1:1 and 1:0.30 w/w) were evaluated. The resulting N-CDs exhibited bright yellow-green fluorescence (470–500 nm) and excitation-dependent photoluminescence under 365 nm UV light. FTIR and UV-Vis spectroscopy confirmed the presence of nitrogen-containing functional groups and effective graphitization, particularly in the 1:0.30 ratio. Fluorescence imaging revealed stronger intensity and greater stain uniformity in thermally softened MPs treated with 1:0.30 N-CDs, with a peak emission of 10,230.02 a.u. at 2 h and PMT 11—surpassing the 1:1 ratio. Bandgap and absorbance analyses supported the superior optical behavior of the lower-concentration formulation. Image analysis further indicated increased luminescent area over time, and two-way ANOVA confirmed statistically significant effects of heating time and PMT settings (p < 0.05). Compared to traditional filtration staining, thermal-assisted application offered enhanced and stable fluorescence. These findings demonstrate the efficacy of green-synthesized N-CDs for MP detection, with potential scalability and environmental applicability. Future work should explore alternative biomass sources and assess N-CD performance under field conditions to optimize environmental sensing strategies.

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