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Comparative analysis of the sorption behaviors and mechanisms of amide herbicides on biodegradable and nondegradable microplastics derived from agricultural plastic products

Environmental Pollution 2022 43 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ni Ni, Ni Ni, Shi Yao, Shi Yao, Shi Yao, Shi Yao, Ni Ni, Shi Yao, Shi Yao, Renyong Shi, Renyong Shi, Ni Ni, Shi Yao, Shi Yao, Fenghe Wang, Shi Yao, Fenghe Wang, Yang Song, Shi Yao, Yang Song, Fenghe Wang, Xiaohui Zhang, Jie Meng, Renyong Shi, Renyong Shi, Fenghe Wang, Xinyan Guo, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Na Wang Jackson Nkoh Nkoh, Fenghe Wang, Shi Yao, Fenghe Wang, Shi Yao, Xinyan Guo, Yang Song, Jackson Nkoh Nkoh, Mali Shi, Yang Song, Xinyan Guo, Mali Shi, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Yang Song, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Xiaohui Zhang, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Fenghe Wang, Yang Song, Yang Song, Fenghe Wang, Shi Yao, Shi Yao, Fenghe Wang, Xiaohui Zhang, Fenghe Wang, Yang Song, Mali Shi, Jackson Nkoh Nkoh, Mali Shi, Yang Song, Fenghe Wang, Ni Ni, Fenghe Wang, Na Wang Yang Song, Na Wang

Summary

Sorption behavior of amide herbicides onto biodegradable and non-biodegradable microplastics was compared, finding that polymer type and weathering state significantly influenced herbicide uptake. The results inform assessments of whether microplastics in intensively farmed soils amplify herbicide mobility and bioavailability.

Polymers

Coexisting of microplastics (MPs) and residual herbicides has received substantial attention due to concerns about the pollutant vector effect. Here, the widely used amide herbicides were examined for their sorption behaviors on the priority biodegradable and nondegradable MPs identified in intensive agriculture. The fitting results indicated that the interactions between napropamide (Nap)/acetochlor (Ace) and the MPs, i.e., poly (butyleneadipate-co-terephthalate) microplastic (PBATM), polyethylene microplastic (PEM), and polypropylene microplastic (PPM), may be dominated by hydrophobic absorptive partitioning on the heterogeneous surfaces. Additionally, chemisorption cannot be ignored for the sorption of Nap/Ace on the biodegradable MPs. The sorption capacities of Nap/Ace on the MPs followed the order of PBATM > PEM > PPM. The differences in sorption capacity which varied by the MP colors were not significant. The hydrophobicity of the herbicides and the MPs, the rubber regions, surface O-functional groups, benzene ring structures and large specific surface area of the biodegradable MPs played key roles in the better performance in sorbing amide herbicides. Moreover, MPs, especially biodegradable MPs, might lead to a higher vector effect for residual amide herbicides than some other common environmental media. This study may provide baseline insights into the great potential of biodegradable MPs to serve as carriers of residual amide herbicides in intensive agrosystems.

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