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Measuring the effects of diethyl phthalate microplastics on marine algae growth using dielectric spectroscopy

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 17 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.
Wu Wenchao, Wu Wenchao, Wu Wenchao, Mohammad Russel Wu Wenchao, Dayong Zhang, Dayong Zhang, Wu Wenchao, Wu Wenchao, Marios Sophocleous, Marios Sophocleous, Yihe Qu, Yihe Qu, Yihe Qu, Jing Wang, Yihe Qu, Jing Wang, Jing Wang, Suramate Chalermwisutkul, Suramate Chalermwisutkul, Mohammad Russel Mohammad Russel

Summary

Researchers developed a dielectric spectroscopy-based sensing method using a custom transmission-line probe on a printed circuit board to monitor the effects of diethyl phthalate (DEP) microplastics on the growth of marine algae (Chlorella pyrenoidosa). Exposure to increasing DEP concentrations over 6 days progressively suppressed algal growth rates and chlorophyll content, with the reflection coefficient at 740 MHz providing a linear indicator of growth inhibition.

This paper presents the development of a dielectric spectroscopy-based method using a customized, transmission line probe, fabricated on a printed circuit board (PCB), for monitoring the effect of diethyl phthalate (DEP) microplastics on marine algae growth. Experiments were performed by exposing marine algae (Chlorella pyrenoidosa) to DEP (0-50 mg) for up to 6 days. In order to amplify the electrophysiological effects and improve the sensing, a glutaraldehyde crosslinking agent was used and encapsulated on the surface of the probe. The reflection coefficient (S) and the complex permittivity (ɛ' & ɛ″) of the Medium Under Test (MUT) were investigated in the frequency range of 30 kHz-800 MHz. Without the presence of DEP, the number of algae (10 cells/mL) and chlorophyll content (mg/L) increased at the rates of 207.73 × 10 cells/mL and 148.1 mg/L per day, respectively. After 6 days of exposing Chlorella pyrenoidosa (C. pyrenoidosa) algae to different DEP concentrations, the growth rate decreased down to -11.92 × 10 cells/mL and -19.19 mg/L (50 mg DEP), respectively. Additionally, the linearity of the relationship kept decreasing as the DEP content increased from R = 0.9716 to R = 0.1050 and from R = 0.9293 to R = 0.4961, respectively. Dielectric spectroscopy using the custom, transmission line probe, at 740 MHz, showed linear relationship (-1.22 dB/day) between the reflection coefficient (S) and hence complex permittivity (ɛ' & ɛ″) without the presence of DEP. However, as the DEP content increased, algae growth was prohibited more intensely, shown both from the number of algae and the chlorophyll content. This trend was reflected on S and subsequently on the complex permittivity. This relationship confirms the capability of this method to monitor the growth of marine algae in almost real-time. This dielectric spectroscopy method could be a potential, low-cost tool to examine the impact of microplastic pollutants on marine microorganisms.

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