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Spatial distribution of microplastics in the tropical Indian Ocean based on laser direct infrared imaging and microwave-assisted matrix digestion

Environmental Pollution 2022 61 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.
Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Fadi El Gareb, Fadi El Gareb, Fadi El Gareb, Fadi El Gareb, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Ole Klein, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Andreas Kerstan, Andreas Kerstan, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Andreas Kerstan, Ole Klein, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Ole Klein, Ole Klein, Ole Klein, Ole Klein, Ole Klein, Ole Klein, Tristan Zimmermann, Fadi El Gareb, Andreas Kerstan, Lars Hildebrandt Andreas Kerstan, Tristan Zimmermann, Andreas Kerstan, Tristan Zimmermann, Lars Hildebrandt Fadi El Gareb, Andreas Kerstan, Andreas Kerstan, Ole Klein, Lars Hildebrandt Ole Klein, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Fadi El Gareb, Daniel Pröfrock, Kay‐Christian Emeis, Kay‐Christian Emeis, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Ole Klein, Ole Klein, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Tristan Zimmermann, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Lars Hildebrandt Daniel Pröfrock, Lars Hildebrandt

Summary

Researchers characterized microplastic distribution across the tropical Indian Ocean using a new quantum cascade laser imaging method, finding an average concentration of 50 particles per cubic meter at depths of 6 meters. The new analytical approach analyzed up to 1,000 particles per hour with over 97% identification accuracy, enabling faster and more reliable monitoring.

Study Type Environmental

Suspended particulate matter was collected from subsurface (6 m) water along an E-W transect through the tropical Indian Ocean using a specialized inert (plastic free) fractionated filtration system. The samples were subjected to a new microwave-assisted "one-pot" matrix removal (efficiency: 94.3% ± 0.3% (1 SD, n = 3)) and microplastic extraction protocol (recovery: 95% ± 4%). The protocol enables a contamination-minimized digestion and requires only four filtration steps. In comparison, classical sample processing approaches involve up to eight filtration steps until the final analysis. Microplastics were identified and physically characterized by means of a novel quantum cascade laser-based imaging routine. LDIR imaging facilitates the analysis of up to 1000 particles/fibers (<300 μm) within approximately 1-2 h. In comparison to FTIR and Raman imaging, it can help to circumvent uncertainties, e. g. from subsampling strategies due to long analysis and post-processing times of large datasets. Over 97% of all particles were correctly identified by the automated routine - without spectral reassignments. Moreover, 100% agreement was obtained between ATR-FTIR and LDIR-based analysis regarding particles and fibers >300 μm. The mean microplastic concentration of the analyzed samples was 50 ± 30 particles/fibers m<sup>-3</sup> (1 SD, n = 21). Number concentrations ranged from 8 to 132 particles/fibers m<sup>-3</sup> (20-300 μm). The most abundant polymer clusters were acrylates/polyurethane/varnish (49%), polyethylene terephthalate (26%), polypropylene (8%), polyethylene (4%) and ethylene-vinyl acetate (4%). 96% of the microplastic particles had a diameter <100 μm. Though inter-study comparison is difficult, the investigated area exhibits a high contamination with particulate plastics compared to other open ocean regions. A distinct spatial trend was observed with an increasing share of the size class 20-50 μm from east to west.

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