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Contrasting Size Dependence of Photochemical Lifetimes of Polypropylene and Expanded Polystyrene Microplastics in Surface Waters

Environmental Science & Technology 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kara Lavender Law Erin Tuttle, Erin Tuttle, Erin Tuttle, Kara Lavender Law Aron Stubbins, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Lixin Zhu, Ariana Patterson, Lixin Zhu, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Lixin Zhu, Lixin Zhu, Charlotte Wiman, Charlotte Wiman, Aron Stubbins, Kara Lavender Law Lixin Zhu, Lixin Zhu, Samuel E. Muñoz, Kara Lavender Law Samuel E. Muñoz, Kara Lavender Law Lixin Zhu, Lixin Zhu, Lixin Zhu, Aron Stubbins, Lixin Zhu, Erin Tuttle, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Aron Stubbins, Lixin Zhu, Lixin Zhu, Lixin Zhu, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Aron Stubbins, Lixin Zhu, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Ariana Patterson, Aron Stubbins, Aron Stubbins, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Lixin Zhu, Kara Lavender Law Aron Stubbins, Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law Kara Lavender Law

Summary

Researchers found that photochemical dissolution of polypropylene and expanded polystyrene microplastics in surface waters does not scale linearly with surface-area-to-volume ratio as particle size decreases. Instead, the two polymers show contrasting size-dependent photochemical lifetimes, suggesting particle size and polymer type must both be considered when modeling plastic persistence in aquatic environments.

Polymers

Microplastics are found floating on natural waters. Sunlight-driven photochemistry can dissolve buoyant microplastics, producing dissolved organic carbon (DOC). We hypothesized that plastic dissolution would increase linearly with increasing surface area (SA)-to-volume (V) ratio as plastics decrease in size. To test this, samples of expanded polystyrene (EPS) and polypropylene (PP) spanning a range of sizes were irradiated while floating on water in a solar simulator. A linear relationship between SA:V and DOC accumulation rate was significant for EPS (<i>p</i> < 0.0001) and PP (<i>p</i> = 0.0086), suggesting SA-controlled reactions. However, a power relationship with an exponent of approximately 0.5 between PP dissolution and SA:V provided a significantly better fit, suggesting that non-SA-controlled processes may limit PP photodissolution. Using these relationships, it was estimated that macroplastics ∼10 cm should take ∼250 to ∼8000 years to photochemically dissolve. However, estimated lifetimes are shorter for smaller plastics, with 1 mm EPS beads and 100 nm PP nanoplastics estimated to have lifetimes of 5.3 years and 3 to 196 days, respectively, with the range in lifetimes for PP dependent upon whether linear or power fits are applied.

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