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Influence of microplastics on the transport of antibiotics in sand filtration investigated by AFM force spectroscopy
Summary
Researchers used atomic force microscopy to measure adhesion forces between antibiotics and microplastics versus sand, finding that hydrophobic and π-π interactions cause microplastics to competitively adsorb antibiotics from quartz sand surfaces and then carry them through sand filtration columns faster than they would move alone.
Microplastics and antibiotics were frequently detected in the effluent of sand filtration, while the presence of microplastics may change the interactions between the antibiotics and the quartz sands. However, the influence of microplastics on the transport of antibiotics in sand filtration has not been revealed. In this study, ciprofloxacin (CIP) and sulfamethoxazole (SMX) were respectively grafted on AFM probes to determine the adhesion forces to the representative microplastics (PS and PE) and the quartz sand. CIP and SMX exhibited low and high mobilities in the quartz sands, respectively. Compositional analysis of the adhesion forces indicated that the lower mobility of CIP in sand filtration columns could be attributed to the electrostatic attraction between the quartz sand and CIP compared with repulsion for SMX. Moreover, the significant hydrophobic interaction between the microplastics and the antibiotics could be responsible for the competitive adsorption of the antibiotics to the microplastics from the quartz sands; meanwhile, the π-π interaction further enhanced the adsorption of PS to the antibiotics. As a result of the high mobility of microplastics in the quartz sands, the carrying effect of microplastics enhanced the transport of antibiotics in the sand filtration columns regardless of their original mobilities. This study provided insights into the mechanism of the microplastics on enhancing the transport of antibiotics in sand filtration systems from the perspective of the molecular interaction.
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