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Application of High-Resolution Near-Infrared Imaging Spectroscopy to Detect Microplastic Particles in Different Environmental Compartments

Water Air & Soil Pollution 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.
Lena Katharina Schmidt, Matthias Munz, Matthias Munz, Mathias Bochow, Matthias Munz, Matthias Munz, Matthias Munz, Marius Bednarz, Matthias Munz, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick Matthias Munz, Sascha E. Oswald, Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Sascha E. Oswald, Marius Bednarz, Lena Katharina Schmidt, Lena Katharina Schmidt, Jasper Kreiß, Mathias Bochow, Mathias Bochow, Marius Bednarz, Matthias Munz, Jasper Kreiß, Mathias Bochow, Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick Lisa Krüger, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Lisa Krüger, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick, Mathias Bochow, Sascha E. Oswald, Claus Gerhard Bannick Sascha E. Oswald, Marius Bednarz, Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick Mathias Bochow, Mathias Bochow, Claus Gerhard Bannick Mathias Bochow, Mathias Bochow, Sascha E. Oswald, Lena Katharina Schmidt, Marius Bednarz, Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Mathias Bochow, Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Mathias Bochow, Claus Gerhard Bannick Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick Sascha E. Oswald, Marius Bednarz, Matthias Munz, Mathias Bochow, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Sascha E. Oswald, Mathias Bochow, Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick Mathias Bochow, Matthias Munz, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick Claus Gerhard Bannick, Matthias Munz, Sascha E. Oswald, Marius Bednarz, Marius Bednarz, Claus Gerhard Bannick, Claus Gerhard Bannick

Summary

Researchers enhanced a lab-based near-infrared imaging spectroscopy setup with a microscopic lens to detect microplastic particles as small as 100 micrometers across multiple environmental sample types, significantly speeding up analysis compared to traditional methods. Faster, semi-automated detection tools are essential for scaling up environmental monitoring of microplastics, which currently requires labor-intensive laboratory work.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Microplastic particles (MPP) occur in various environmental compartments all over the world. They have been frequently investigated in oceans, freshwaters, and sediments, but studying their distribution in space and time is somewhat limited by the time-consuming nature of the available accurate detection strategies. Here, we present an enhanced application of lab-based near-infrared imaging (NIR) spectroscopy to identify the total number of MPP, classify polymer types, and determine particle sizes while maintaining short measuring times. By adding a microscopic lens to the hyperspectral camera and a cross slide table to the setup, the overall detectable particle size has been decreased to 100 µm in diameter. To verify and highlight the capabilities of this enhanced, semi-automated detection strategy, it was applied to key areas of microplastic research, such as a lowland river, the adjacent groundwater wells, and marine beach sediments. Results showed mean microplastic concentrations of 0.65 MPP/L in the Havel River close to Berlin and 0.004 MPP/L in the adjacent groundwater. The majority of MPP detected in the river were PP and PE. In 8 out of 15 groundwater samples, no MPP was found. Considering only the samples with quantifiable MPP, then on average 0.01 MPP/L was present in the groundwater (98.5% removal during bank filtration). The most abundant polymers in groundwater were PE, followed by PVC, PET, and PS. Mean MPP concentrations at two beaches on the German Baltic Sea coast were 5.5~MPP/kg at the natural reserve Heiligensee and Hüttelmoor and 47.5 MPP/kg at the highly frequented Warnemünde beach.

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