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Laser microdissection pressure catapulting (LMPC): a new technique to handle single microplastic particles for number-based validation strategies

Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 2023 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Tristan Zimmermann, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Tristan Zimmermann, Daniel Pröfrock, Tristan Zimmermann, Daniel Pröfrock, Tristan Zimmermann, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt

Summary

Researchers examined laser microdissection pressure catapulting (LMPC) as a contactless technique for handling individual microplastic particles ranging from a few micrometers to several hundred micrometers, enabling their precise transport into collection vials for number-based method validation. Proof-of-principle experiments with polyethylene and polyethylene terephthalate demonstrated the technology can reliably produce particle number-based spike suspensions needed for rigorous microplastic analytical method validation.

This study examines laser microdissection pressure catapulting (LMPC) as an innovative method for microplastic research. Laser pressure catapulting as part of commercially available LMPC microscopes enables the precise handling of microplastic particles without any mechanical contact. In fact, individual particles with sizes between several micrometers and several hundred micrometers can be transported over centimeter-wide distances into a collection vial. Therefore, the technology enables the exact handling of defined numbers of small microplastics (or even individual ones) with the greatest precision. Herewith, it allows the production of particle number-based spike suspensions for method validation. Proof-of-principle LMPC experiments with polyethylene and polyethylene terephthalate model particles in the size range from 20 to 63 µm and polystyrene microspheres (10 µm diameter) demonstrated precise particle handling without fragmentation. Furthermore, the ablated particles showed no evidence of chemical alteration as seen in the particles' IR spectra acquired via laser direct infrared analysis. We propose LMPC as a promising new tool to produce future microplastic reference materials such as particle-number spiked suspensions, since LMPC circumvents the uncertainties resulting from the potentially heterogeneous behavior or inappropriate sampling from microplastic suspensions. Furthermore, LMPC could be advantageous for the generation of very accurate calibration series of spherical particles for microplastic analysis via pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (down to 0.54 ng), as it omits the dissolution of bulk polymers.

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