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Long-term release kinetic characteristics of microplastic from commonly used masks into water under simulated natural environments

The Science of The Total Environment 2023 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shuli Liu, Xiaoxia Yang, Shuli Liu, Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Xiaoxia Yang, Ying Liu Qian He, Shuli Liu, Shuli Liu, Xiaoxia Yang, Ying Liu Ying Liu Ying Liu Xiaoxia Yang, Xiaoxia Yang, Xiaoxia Yang, Yan Li, Xiaoxia Yang, Xiaoxia Yang, Xiaoxia Yang, Xiaoxia Yang, Ying Liu Liangkai Chen, Yan Li, Lei Luo, Ying Liu Ying Liu Ying Liu Ying Liu Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Liangkai Chen, Liangkai Chen, Liangkai Chen, Liangkai Chen, Ying Liu Yan Li, Zhou Yan, Yan Li, Liangkai Chen, Ying Liu Ying Liu Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Yan Li, Ying Liu Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Shuli Liu, Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Ying Liu Qian He, Qian He, Lei Luo, Yan Li, Yan Li, Zhou Yan, Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Yan Li, Qian He, Ying Liu Xiaoxia Yang, Qian He, Yan Li, Shuli Liu, Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Qian He, Shuli Liu, Yan Li, Xiaoxia Yang, Yan Li, Shuli Liu, Yan Li, Ying Liu Yan Li, Ying Liu Kunming Tian, Xiaoxia Yang, Kunming Tian, Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Ying Liu Shuli Liu, Shuli Liu, Shuli Liu, Shuli Liu, Lei Luo, Shuli Liu, Shuli Liu, Yan Li, Kunming Tian, Kunming Tian, Kunming Tian, Kunming Tian, Kunming Tian, Yan Li, Ying Liu Kunming Tian, Ying Liu

Summary

Researchers studied the long-term release of microplastics from four types of face masks (cotton, fashion, N95, and disposable surgical) in simulated natural water conditions over 12 months. The study found that all mask types continuously released microplastic fibers and fragments in a time-dependent manner, with particles predominantly smaller than 20 micrometers, accompanied by physical degradation and photo-oxidation. These findings suggest that improperly discarded masks are an ongoing source of microplastic pollution in aquatic environments.

Masks-related microplastic pollution poses a new threat to the environment and human health that has gained increasing concern. However, the long-term release kinetics of microplastic from masks in aquatic environments have yet to studied, which hampers its risk assessment. Four types of masks, namely cotton mask, fashion mask, N95 mask, and disposable surgical mask were exposed to systematically simulated natural water environments to determine the time-dependent microplastic release characteristics at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months, respectively. In addition, the structure changes of employed masks were examined by scanning electron microscopy. Moreover, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was applied to analyze the chemical composition and groups of released microplastic fibers. Our results showed that the simulated natural water environment could degrade four types of masks and continuously produce microplastic fibers/fragments in a time-dependent manner. The dominant size of released particles/fibers was below 20 μm across four types of face masks. The physical structure of all four masks was damaged to varying degrees concomitant with photo-oxidation reaction. Collectively, we characterized the long-term release kinetics of microplastic from four types of commonly used masks under a well-mimic real word water environment. Our findings suggest that urgent action must be taken to properly manage disposable masks and ultimately limit the health threats associated with discarded masks.

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