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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

In-situ and real-time nano/microplastic coatings and dynamics in water using nano-DIHM: A novel capability for the plastic life cycle research

Water Research 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.
Zi Wang, Zi Wang, Zi Wang, Zi Wang, Zi Wang, Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Parisa A. Ariya, Parisa A. Ariya, Parisa A. Ariya, Parisa A. Ariya, Maïline Fok Cheung, Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Abolghasem Pilechi Maïline Fok Cheung, Parisa A. Ariya, Parisa A. Ariya, Maïline Fok Cheung, Parisa A. Ariya, Parisa A. Ariya, Abolghasem Pilechi Maïline Fok Cheung, Parisa A. Ariya, Abolghasem Pilechi

Summary

Researchers used a novel nano-digital inline holographic microscope to study nano- and microplastic particles in real time in water, revealing distinct coating patterns on particle surfaces and dynamic aggregation behaviors that standard offline methods miss.

Study Type Environmental

A novel nano-digital inline holographic microscope (nano-DIHM) was used to advance in-situ and real-time nano/microplastic physicochemical research, such as particle coatings and dynamic processes in water. Nano-DIHM data provided evidence of distinct coating patterns on nano/microplastic particles by oleic acid, magnetite, and phytoplankton, representing organic, inorganic, and biological coatings widely present in the natural surroundings. A high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy confirmed nano-DIHM data, demonstrating its nano/microplastic research capabilities. The sedimentation of two plastic size categories was examined: (a) ∼10 to 700 µm, and (b) ∼ 1 to 5 mm. Particle size was the primary factor affecting the sedimentation for studied (a) microplastics and (b) pellets. Two types of silicone rubbers exhibited different sedimentation processes. We also demonstrated that inorganic ions in seawater and oleic acid organic coatings altered the sedimentation velocity of studied plastics by 9 - 13% and 5 - 9%, respectively. Semi-empirical probability functions were developed and incorporated into a numerical model (CaMPSim-3D) to simulate the transport of studied microplastics and pellets in the Saint John River estuary. Water dynamics was the driving force of plastic transport, yet the accumulation of plastics was selectively dependant on particle physicochemical properties such as size and density by ∼ 7%. The usage of nano-DIHM for targeted identification of nano/microplastic hotspots and aquatic plastic wastes remediation were discussed.

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