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Distinctive adsorption and desorption behaviors of temporal and post-treatment heavy metals by iron nanoparticles in the presence of microplastics

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 19 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.
Shuhan Ren, Zhenyi Luo, Yuwei Pan, Xuedong Chen, Lei Yu, Ke Yin

Summary

Microplastics inhibited adsorption of most heavy metals by nano-zero-valent iron and facilitated their desorption during post-treatment, with the effect primarily affecting metals binding through surface complexation or electrostatic interaction rather than metals involved in redox reactions, providing insights for improved contaminated site remediation.

There are increasing concerns about microplastic (MP) pollution in the natural environment. Consequently, numerous physicochemical and toxicological studies have been conducted on the effects of MPs. However, few studies have concerned the potential impact of MPs on contaminated site remediation. We herein investigated the influence of MPs on the temporary and post heavy metal removal by iron nanoparticles, including pristine and sulfurized nano zero-valent irons (nZVI and S-nZVI). MPs inhibited adsorption of most heavy metals during the treatment of iron nanoparticles, and facilitated their desorption, such as Pb (II) from nZVI and Zn (II) from S-nZVI. However, such effects presented by MPs was usually less than those by dissolved oxygen (DO). Most desorption cases are irrelevant to the reduced formats of heavy metals involving redox reactions, such as Cu (I) or Cr (III), suggesting that the influence of MPs on metals are limited to those binding with iron nanoparticles through surface complexation or electrostatic interaction. As another common factor, natural organic matter (NOM) had almost no influence on the heavy metal desorption. These insights shed lights for enhanced remediation of heavy metals by nZVI/S-NZVI in the presence of MPs.

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