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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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Microplastics existence affected heavy metal affinity to ferrihydrite as a representative sediment mineral

The Science of The Total Environment 2022 38 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.
Jiawei Li, Xiao Lu, Xiao Lu, Lijuan Wang, Hongwei Hu, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Hongwei Hu, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Jiawei Li, Jiawei Li, Lijuan Wang, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Jiawei Li, Jiangpeng Li, Hongwei Hu, Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Xiao Lu, Lijuan Wang, Xiao Lu, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Xiao Lu, Xiao Lu, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Lijuan Wang, Jiangpeng Li, Lili Liu, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Xiao Lu, Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Jiangpeng Li, Yuanyuan Tang Jiawei Li, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang Lijuan Wang, Yuanyuan Tang Yuanyuan Tang

Summary

Researchers found that the presence of polystyrene microplastics altered how heavy metals adsorb onto ferrihydrite sediment mineral, with certain microplastic-to-mineral ratios enhancing lead, chromium, and cadmium adsorption, indicating that microplastics can change heavy metal fate and mobility in contaminated sediments.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The coexistence of minerals, heavy metals and microplastics in sediment has been widely reported, while the interactions between minerals and heavy metals may be affected by the presence of microplastics. Therefore, to elucidate the effect of microplastics on the interactions between heavy metals and sediment minerals, this study conducted a series of experiments using polystyrene (PS) microplastics, Pb/Cr/Cd and ferrihydrite (Fh). The presence of PS microplastics with ferrihydrite (Fh-MPs200, mass ratio of ferrihydrite to PS of 200:1) improved the adsorption capacity of ferrihydrite, especially with an increase of 36 % for Pb. Morphological characterization demonstrated that the nano-ferrihydrite particles were dispersed on the surface of the PS microplastics, increasing the available reaction sites of the ferrihydrite particles. Furthermore, the results of zeta potential and pH effect showed that the reduction in electrostatic repulsion after adding PS was another critical reason for the increase in Pb adsorption by Fh-MP200. As a result, the presence of PS microplastics enhanced the complexation of Pb ions and the hydroxyl groups on the ferrihydrite surface. This study demonstrated that the presence of microplastics in the sedimentary environment can alter the dispersion and surface properties of minerals, thereby affecting the accumulation and transportation of heavy metals at the water-sediment interface.

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