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The weathering process of polyethylene microplastics in the paddy soil system: Does the coexistence of pyrochar or hydrochar matter?

Environmental Pollution 2022 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Junxia Huang, Junxia Huang, Junxia Huang, Bingyu Wang, Qiuyue Zhang, Qiuyue Zhang, Bingyu Wang, Cenyao Shang, Cenyao Shang, Junxia Huang, Bingyu Wang, Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Bingyu Wang, Yanfang Feng Bingyu Wang, Wenzhen Guo, Yanfang Feng Huifang Xie, Wenzhen Guo, Huifang Xie, Yanfang Feng Junxia Huang, Yanfang Feng Qiuyue Zhang, Junxia Huang, Yanfang Feng Qiuyue Zhang, Bingyu Wang, Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Bingyu Wang, Bingyu Wang, Huifang Xie, Huifang Xie, Bingyu Wang, Yanfang Feng Hailong Gao, Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Yanfang Feng Qiuyue Zhang, Yanfang Feng

Summary

Researchers conducted a 24-week paddy soil weathering experiment with polyethylene microplastics in the presence or absence of pyrochar or hydrochar, finding that weathering roughened and discolored PE particle surfaces, and that weathered PE microplastics showed altered sorption capacity toward cadmium, bisphenol A, and dimethyl phthalate compared to original particles.

Polymers

This study is based on a particular test site to simulate the weathering process of microplastics (MPs) in paddy soil. A substantial amount of plastic waste, especially MPs, inevitably accumulates in agricultural soil due to the high consumption and short average use of plastics. Recently, MP pollution has become a global environmental concern. However, insight into the soil weathering process of MPs in paddy soil, particularly in the presence of biochar, is lacking. In this study, the physicochemical properties of polyethylene (PE) MPs were determined through a 24-week weathering system conducted in paddy soil, paddy soil with pyrochar, or hydrochar. Moreover, the sorption of original and weathered PE MPs toward three typical pollutants (cadmium/Cd, bisphenol A/BPA, and dimethyl phthalate/DMP) was investigated. The surface of PE MPs was fractured, 1.1-fold rougher, yellow-colored (11.7 units), and 1.8-fold more oxidized after paddy soil weathering. In addition, the crystallinity, negative charge, and stronger hydrophilicity of weathered PE MPs increased compared to original PE MPs. Weathering in a pyrochar or hydrochar system caused fissures, extensive destruction of amorphous areas, and accelerated chemical or bio-oxidation processes for PE MPs, resulting in a more noticeable change in roughness (1.4-2.2-fold), yellow color (12.7-13.7), crystallinity (1.2-1.5-fold), and oxygen content (2.5-3.6-fold). Weathered PE MPs facilitated the sorption with Cd and BPA, attributed to larger specific surface area, abundant polar functional groups, and increased negatively charged sites. However, sorption of DMP to PE MPs was highly influenced by their hydrophobicity, resulting in decreased hydrophobic partition sorption on weathered PE MPs. Overall, paddy soil weathering affected the properties of PE MPs and enhanced sorption of Cd and BPA but reduced sorption of DMP. The coexistence of biochar exacerbated the paddy soil weathering effect. The insight gained from this study assists in better understanding the weathering process of PE MPs in agricultural soils.

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