0
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 Food & Water Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Nanoplastics in aquatic environments: Origin, separation and characterization: Review

Tehnika 2023 Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Dušan Milojkov, Angelina Mitrović, Danijela Smiljanić, Gvozden Jovanović, Miroslav Sokić

Summary

This review covers the origins, separation methods, and characterization of nanoplastics in aquatic environments. Nanoplastics (1–100 nm) are particularly concerning because their tiny size gives them a large surface area for adsorbing pollutants and allows them to penetrate biological barriers more easily than larger microplastics.

Body Systems

Scientists discovered plastic in the early 1900s, but didn't realize the detrimental effects its fragmentation could have on the environment 100 years later. In particular, nanoplastics (NPs) particles ranging in size from 1 to 100 nm can cause major problems in the living world due to their high specific surface area for the adsorption other polluting substances from water, and their further bioaccumulation through the food chain. There is no distinctive method to identify, characterize, and quantify nanoplastics in aquatic environments. Although many of the methods developed to study microplastics are not directly applicable to nanoplastics, conventional methods of characterizing nanoplastics are usually tedious because they study individual nanoparticles in isolation. Since nanoplastics resulting from the decomposition of microplastics have different properties than engineering plastic nanoparticles, new techniques need to be developed to help us better understand the seriousness of the nanoplastic problem. Nanoplastic can be isolated from the water environment by a combination of filters and ultracentrifugation. A recent publications states that combining microscopy and spectroscopy, supported by chemometric techniques, will alow a better understand he behavior of nanoplastic particles in the environment and organisms. High hopes are placed on microscopies combined with neural networks for the quantification and characterization of nanoplastics in complex systems. This article describes the degradation pathways of plastics and the formation of nanoplastics in aquatic environments, and possible methods for separation and characterization of nanoplastics in relation to recent publications.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Characterization, occurrence, environmental behaviors, and risks of nanoplastics in the aquatic environment: Current status and future perspectives

This review characterized the occurrence, environmental behavior, and toxicity of nanoplastics in aquatic systems, noting that their small size gives them unique properties — including higher surface reactivity and greater bioavailability — that make them potentially more hazardous than larger microplastics, while also harder to detect.

Article Tier 2

Research progress of nanoplastics in freshwater

This review summarized the environmental fate, extraction methods, characterization techniques, and biological effects of nanoplastics in freshwater systems, noting that NPs' small size, high surface area, and cell-penetrating ability make them potentially more harmful than microplastics despite being less studied.

Article Tier 2

Separation and characterization of microplastic and nanoplastic particles in marine environment

This review examined methods for separating and characterizing microplastics and nanoplastics in marine environments, addressing challenges posed by their tiny size, diverse properties, and ability to adsorb pollutants.

Article Tier 2

Nanoplastics in water

This paper examines the presence and behavior of nanoplastics, extremely small plastic particles, in water environments. Understanding how these particles move through and persist in water is important for assessing potential risks to aquatic ecosystems and human health.

Review Tier 2

Nanoplastics in the Aquatic Environment. Critical Review

This critical review synthesized the emerging science on nanoplastics in aquatic environments, covering detection challenges, sources, behavior, and toxicological evidence, and identifying major gaps in knowledge about nanoplastic-specific risks.

Share this paper