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Labeling Microplastics with Fluorescent Dyes for Detection, Recovery, and Degradation Experiments

Molecules 2022 47 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.
Zhiqiang Gao, Zhiqiang Gao, Zhiqiang Gao, Zhiqiang Gao, Zhiqiang Gao, Kendall Wontor, Zhiqiang Gao, Zhiqiang Gao, Kendall Wontor, Zhiqiang Gao, James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel Kendall Wontor, Kendall Wontor, James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel Kendall Wontor, James V. Cizdziel Kendall Wontor, James V. Cizdziel Kendall Wontor, Kendall Wontor, James V. Cizdziel Kendall Wontor, Kendall Wontor, Kendall Wontor, James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel Kendall Wontor, James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel James V. Cizdziel

Summary

Researchers optimized fluorescent dye staining protocols for labeling 17 different plastic polymer types using four textile dyes and Nile red for detection, recovery, and degradation experiments. Dye performance varied significantly by polymer type and staining conditions, and standardized protocols were recommended to improve comparability across microplastic studies.

Study Type Environmental

Staining microplastics (MPs) for fluorescence detection has been widely applied in MP analyses. However, there is a lack of standardized staining procedures and conditions, with different researchers using different dye concentrations, solvents, incubation times, and staining temperatures. Moreover, with the limited types and morphologies of commercially available MPs, a simple and optimized approach to making fluorescent MPs is needed. In this study, 4 different textile dyes, along with Nile red dye for comparison, are used to stain 17 different polymers under various conditions to optimize the staining procedure. The MPs included both virgin and naturally weathered polymers with different sizes and shapes (e.g., fragments, fibers, foams, pellets, beads). We show that the strongest fluorescence intensity occurred with aqueous staining at 70 °C for 3 h with a dye concentration of 5 mg/mL, 55 mg/mL, and 2 µg/mL for iDye dyes, Rit dyes, and Nile red, respectively. Red fluorescent signals are stronger and thus preferred over green ones. The staining procedure did not significantly alter the surface, mass, and chemical characteristics of the particles, based on FTIR and stereomicroscopy. Stained MPs were spiked into freshwater, saltwater, a sediment slurry, and wastewater-activated sludge; even after several days, the recovered particles are still strongly fluoresced. The approach described herein for producing customized fluorescent MPs and quantifying MPs in laboratory-controlled experiments is both straightforward and simple.

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