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Masses and size distributions of mechanically fragmented microplastics from LDPE and EPS under simulated landfill conditions

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2022 36 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.
Xunchang Fei Xunchang Fei Yuliang Guo, Yuliang Guo, Xuhong Lu, Xuhong Lu, Yao Wang, Yuliang Guo, Hongping He, Hongping He, Hongping He, Xunchang Fei Xuhong Lu, Yao Wang, Xunchang Fei Xuhong Lu, Yuliang Guo, Xuhong Lu, Hongping He, Xunchang Fei Xunchang Fei Xunchang Fei Yao Wang, Xunchang Fei Xunchang Fei Xunchang Fei Xunchang Fei Hongping He, Xunchang Fei

Summary

Researchers simulated landfill conditions by compressing LDPE and EPS plastic with sand under varying pressures for up to 300 days, finding that mechanical fragmentation generates increasing quantities of microplastics as both compression stress and duration rise, with distinct size distributions for each plastic type.

Polymers

Landfills contain significant amounts of plastic waste (PW) and microplastics (MPs). However, the contributions of various PW fragmentation processes to the quality and quantity of MPs in landfills are unclear. In this study, LDPE and EPS pieces were mixed with sand to simulate landfilled solid waste, which experienced one-dimensional abiotic compression under vertical stress of 100-800 kPa for 1-300 days. The generated MPs were stained and quantified with a fluorescent microscope. The numbers and masses of the fragmented MPs increase with the increasing compression stress and duration following linear or exponential trends. EPS has a lower stiffness than LDPE, thus generates more MPs under the same compression conditions. Stress-dependent and time-dependent fragmentation mechanisms are distinguished, the former is driven by sand-plastic porosity reduction and the latter is due to microscopic interfacial creep with minimal porosity reduction. Most of the mechanically fragmented MPs have diameters < 100 µm. The MPs size distributions follow an established power-law model, which are dependent on stress, duration, porosity reduction, and fragmentation mechanism. Our results serve as conservative estimations on long-term MPs generation in real landfills, which provide confirmative and quantitative evidence to support the previous studies reporting the varied MPs abundances and properties within landfills.

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