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. Sign in to save

Atrazine sorption on biodegradable microplastics: Significance of microbial aging

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sun Shu, Xia Yang, Liang Xu, Jiao Zhang, Yajuan Wang, Zhenfeng Zhou, Zhenfeng Zhou

Summary

Researchers found that soil microbial aging of biodegradable microplastics — polylactic acid (PLA) and PBAT — significantly alters their surface properties and increases their capacity to adsorb the herbicide atrazine, suggesting that biodegradable plastics may pose underappreciated pollutant-transport risks as they break down.

Polymers

The study of the environmental sorption behavior of typical biodegradable microplastics (BMPs) during biodegradation is essential given the different characteristics of BMPs and conventional microplastics (MPs) and the knowledge gap on the sorption capacity of BMPs for pollutants during degradation. In this study, polylactic acid (PLA) and poly (butylene-adipate-co-terephthalate) (PBAT) were chosen as research objects, and the effects of soil microbial aging on their surface properties and atrazine (ATZ) sorption were investigated. The structural composition of the bacterial community was essentially similar between B-PLA and B-PBAT. Microbial aging action created new pores and cavities in PLA, forming microbial films that led to the agglomeration of PLA particles. The microbial aging action destroyed the amorphous regions of PLA and PBAT, resulting in higher crystallinity, and the ester groups broke to form carboxyl groups. The equilibrium sorption (Q) of B-PLA increased by 11.12 % compared with PLA, while the Q of B-PBAT decreased by 4.95 % compared to PBAT. These results show that soil microbes change the surface properties of PLA and PBAT, thus affecting the sorption mechanism of ATZ, and provide a theoretical premise for the behavior and ecological risk assessment of ATZ in the presence of BMPs.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Aging of biodegradable-mulch-derived microplastics reduces their sorption capacity of atrazine

UV aging of biodegradable PBAT and PBST microplastics reduced their sorption capacity for the herbicide atrazine, with partition coefficients declining for both aged polymers due to changes in surface area, hydrophobicity, polarity, and crystallinity.

Article Tier 2

Behavior and mechanism of atrazine adsorption on pristine and aged microplastics in the aquatic environment: Kinetic and thermodynamic studies

Researchers systematically explored how the pesticide atrazine adsorbs onto both pristine and aged microplastics in aquatic environments. The study found that aged microplastics had higher adsorption capacities than pristine ones, with the aging process and pH significantly affecting surface charge and adsorption behavior, suggesting that weathered microplastics may carry greater loads of chemical contaminants.

Article Tier 2

Effects of microplastics on the environmental behaviors of the herbicide atrazine in soil: Dissipation, adsorption, and bioconcentration

Researchers examined how the presence of microplastics in soil affects the behavior of the herbicide atrazine, including how quickly it breaks down and how much is absorbed by plants. They found that microplastics reduced the herbicide's half-life in soil, increased its adsorption to soil particles, and significantly boosted its uptake into plant tissues. The study suggests that microplastic contamination in agricultural soils could change how pesticides behave, potentially increasing crop contamination.

Article Tier 2

Aging characteristics of polylatic acid microplastics and their adsorption on hydrophilic organic pollutants: mechanistic investigations and theoretical calculations

Researchers characterized how polylactic acid microplastics undergo UV and thermal aging in aquatic environments, finding that aging altered surface chemistry, increased hydrophilicity, and enhanced adsorption of heavy metal pollutants—raising concerns about aged biodegradable plastics as carriers of co-contaminants.

Article Tier 2

Adsorption/desorption behavior of degradable polylactic acid microplastics on bisphenol A under different aging conditions

Researchers studied how different types of UV-simulated aging affect the ability of polylactic acid microplastics to adsorb and release bisphenol A. The study found that aging conditions changed the surface properties of the biodegradable plastic, altering its interaction with this common environmental contaminant. The findings suggest that even biodegradable microplastics can act as carriers of harmful chemicals depending on their degradation state.

Share this paper