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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Quantification of polystyrene microplastics in soils by pyrolysis-GC-MS: Effects of matrix and polymer molecular weight

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) 2022 Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Aline De Carvalho, Olivier Mathieu, Mathieu Thévenot, Hélène Celle‐Jeanton, Philippe Amiotte‐Suchet

Summary

Researchers investigated the effects of polymer molecular weight and soil matrix composition on pyrolysis-GC-MS quantification of polystyrene microplastics, finding that low molecular weight PS produced fewer pyrolysis markers than high molecular weight PS and that soil matrices caused up to 5-fold quantification errors depending on the marker selected. Addition of poly(4-fluorostyrene) as an internal standard helped minimize matrix effects, improving the reliability of this analytical method.

Polymers

Quantifying microplastic pollution, i.e. particles smaller than 5 mm, in complex environmental samples has become a fundamental issue for the assessment of the environmental and health consequences of this pollutant. Pyrolysis-GC-MS emerges as a promising alternative, and for robust quantification, it is essential to improve our understanding of the aspects interfering in the pyrolysis of microplastics. In this work we investigate the effects of the polymer molecular weight and soil matrices on the pyrolysis-GC-MS analysis of polystyrene (PS) microplastics. We also evaluated the effectiveness of the addition of Poly(4-fluorostyrene) (PSF) as an internal standard to minimize matrix effects. PS microplastics (of low - 35.10³ and high - 400.10³ molecular weight, LMW and HMW, respectively) were individually spiked in different matrices and calibration curves were prepared in the range 0.1 to 2.5 mg/g. Samples were directly injected into the pyrolysis-GC-MS system and the three main markers of PS pyrolysis (styrene, styrene dimer and styrene trimer) were considered. PSLMW showed a reduced formation of all markers compared to PSHMW, and in both cases the styrene was proportionally more formed than the other markers. Due to differences in the slopes of calibration curves, quantification errors up to 5-fold might occur depending on the marker chosen and the polymer molecular weight used to build the curves. A strong matrix effect was noticed, sharpening the answer of PS markers in a 2.6 to 7.5-fold range. This effect was mostly attenuated through the normalization by PSF markers. In the absence of an internal standard, external calibration curves should be avoided, and the standard addition method might be applied. In addition, the development of reference materials for the study of microplastic pollution should encompass the complexity of the target analyte, including the diversity of molecular structures, such as oxidation degrees and molecular weights. Also see: https://micro2022.sciencesconf.org/425902/document

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

A practical method for mass quantification of microplastics in soil media using pyrolysis gas chromatography-mass spectrometry

Researchers developed and validated a pyrolysis gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS) method for quantifying polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene microplastics in soil, achieving low detection limits (0.02-0.44 microgram), strong linearity, and recovery rates of 86-100% across three soil types. Cryomilling improved homogeneity and accuracy by 3.2%, and FTIR confirmed polymer identities with over 85% spectral match.

Article Tier 2

Determination of Polystyrene Microplastic in Soil by Pyrolysis – Gas Chromatography – Mass Spectrometry (pyr-GC-MS)

This study developed and validated a pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Pyr-GC-MS) method for quantifying polystyrene microplastics in soil samples. The technique offers a sensitive analytical approach for detecting plastic contamination in terrestrial environments.

Article Tier 2

Quantitation of polystyrene by pyrolysis-GC-MS: The impact of polymer standards on micro and nanoplastic analysis

Researchers evaluated how the choice of polystyrene reference standard affects the accuracy of a key method (Pyrolysis-GC-MS) used to detect and measure microplastics and nanoplastics, finding that different standards with varying molecular structures produce substantially different results for the same sample. This highlights an urgent need for standardized reference materials to make microplastic measurement methods more reliable and comparable across labs.

Article Tier 2

Does particle size affect micro- and nanoplastic quantification by pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry: a study on polystyrene

Researchers investigated whether particle size affects the accuracy of pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS) quantification of micro- and nanoplastics, using polystyrene as a model polymer to assess how sample particle dimensions influence analytical results.

Article Tier 2

Evaluating the influence of polystyrene standards on quantification in environmental samples

Researchers tested how different types and molecular weights of polystyrene standards affect the accuracy of a common analytical method used to measure microplastics in environmental samples. They found that the choice of standard material can significantly over- or underestimate actual microplastic concentrations, with low-molecular-weight standards causing the most inaccurate readings. The study calls for greater standardization in analytical methods to ensure reliable microplastic measurements across studies.

Share this paper