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Environmental impacts of covid-19 pandemic: Release of microplastics, organic contaminants and trace metals from face masks under ambient environmental conditions

Environmental Research 2022 58 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.
Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Adewale Oluwasogo Olalemi, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Gideon Aina Idowu, Adewale Oluwasogo Olalemi, Adewale Oluwasogo Olalemi, Adewale Oluwasogo Olalemi, Adewale Oluwasogo Olalemi, Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi Ademola Festus Aiyesanmi

Summary

This study monitored microplastic, organic contaminant, and toxic metal release from COVID-19 face masks under open-environment exposure conditions rather than only controlled laboratory forces, finding that environmental weathering substantially increased release rates over time. The findings provide more realistic estimates of the pollution burden from the estimated 1.24 trillion masks discarded during the pandemic.

Polymers

The covid-19 pandemic era was characterized by heavy usage and disposal of medical face masks, now estimated at over 1.24 trillion. Few studies had attempted to demonstrate the release of microplastics from face masks using simulated conditions and application of mechanical forces, far different from the effects experienced by face masks dumped in the open environment, in landfills and dumpsites. In the current study, we monitored the release of microplastics, organic contaminants and toxic metals from medical face masks degraded under normal outdoor environmental conditions, over a period of 60 weeks. We showed that face mask's decomposition proceeded via sunlight (UV) - initiated oxidative degradation, leading to the replacement of methylene (CH-) and alkyl (CH-) groups in face mask's polypropylene backbone with hydroxyl and ketonic functional groups. Organic compounds released from decaying face masks into the surrounding soil included alkanes, alkenes, carboxylic acids/diesters and phthalate esters. Mean maximum concentration of phthalates in the soil ranged from 3.14 mg/kg (diethyl phthalate) to 11.68 mg/kg di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate. Heavy metals, including Cu, Pb, Cd, As, Sn and Fe, were released into the soil, leading to contamination factors of 3.11, 2.84, 2.42, 2.26, 1.80 and 0.99, respectively. Together, the metals gave a pollution load index (PLI) of 2.102, indicating that they constitute moderate pollution of the soil surrounding the heap of face masks. This study provides a realistic insight into the fate and impacts of the enormous amounts of face masks, disposed or abandoned in soil environments during the covid-19 pandemic.

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