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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 Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Rapid detection of nanoplastics and small microplastics by Nile-Red staining and flow cytometry

Environmental Chemistry Letters 2022 65 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Angelica Bianco, Angelica Bianco, Monica Passananti, Davide Vione Angelica Bianco, Angelica Bianco, Monica Passananti, Angelica Bianco, Monica Passananti, Fabrizio Sordello, Fabrizio Sordello, Fabrizio Sordello, Angelica Bianco, Davide Vione Angelica Bianco, Monica Passananti, Davide Vione Monica Passananti, Fabrizio Sordello, Luca Carena, Nina Peitsaro, Nina Peitsaro, Davide Vione Davide Vione Davide Vione Luca Carena, Fabrizio Sordello, Monica Passananti, Monica Passananti, Monica Passananti, Davide Vione Monica Passananti, Monica Passananti, Fabrizio Sordello, Davide Vione

Summary

Researchers developed a rapid method for detecting nanoplastics and small microplastics by combining Nile-Red fluorescent staining with flow cytometry. The technique can quantify plastic particles in the 0.6 to 15 micrometer range in just 90 seconds, which is hundreds of times faster than conventional spectroscopic methods. The approach showed high detection efficiency for polyethylene, polyvinylchloride, and polystyrene, offering a practical tool for environmental nanoplastic monitoring.

Abstract Microplastics are of rising health concerns because they have been detected even in remote and pristine environments, from the Artic snow to the Marianne Trench. The occurrence and impact of nanoplastics in ecosystems is almost unknown, in particular due to analytical limitations such as very small sizes that fall below detection limits of current techniques. Here we take advantage of a common interference in analytical flow cytometry to develop a method for the quantification of the number of plastic particles in the 0.6–15 µm size range. Plastic particles are stained with the lipophilic dye Nile-Red then detected by flow cytometry, a method regularly used in biology for rapid quantification of fluorescent cells. We found that sample analysis lasts 90 s, which is hundreds of times faster than the analysis of filter portions by micro-Raman and other spectroscopic techniques. Our method is highly efficient in detecting polyethylene, with staining efficiency higher than 70% and signal linearity with concentration. Staining efficiency up to 96% was observed for polyvinylchloride and for polystyrene.

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