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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Microplastics as vectors of radioiodine in the marine environment: A study on sorption and interaction mechanism

Environmental Pollution 2022 32 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Sabyasachi Rout, Sonali Yadav, Sonali Yadav, V. M. Joshi, Rupali Karpe, Vandana Pulhani, Arun Kumar, Arun Kumar

Summary

Researchers investigated microplastics as potential vectors of radioiodine in the marine environment, finding that different polymer types exhibited varying sorption capacities for radioiodine, revealing a previously unstudied pathway for radionuclide transport.

Polymers

Radioiodine is one of the long-lived fission products and also an important radionuclide released during nuclear accidents, which generates interest in its environmental fate. Its sorption has been studied in a wide range of materials, but no equivalent study exists for microplastics, an emerging environmental vector. Weathering and biofilm formation on microplastics can enhance radioiodine sorption. For the first time, we're reporting how radioiodine interacts with different types of polyethylene derived microplastics (pristine, irradiated, and biofilm developed microplastics). This study revealed that exposure to radiation and the marine environment significantly alters the physico-chemical properties of microplastics. In particular, in marine-exposed samples, a signature of biofilm development was detected. Speciation study indicates that iodine exists in the iodide form in the studied marine environment. The study revealed that, iodide ions attach to biofilm-developed microplastics via electrostatic, ion-dipole, pore filling, and van der Waals interactions. Pore filling, ion-dipole, and van der Waals interactions may cause iodide binding to irradiated microplastics, whereas pore-filling and van der Waals interactions cause iodide binding to pristine microplastics. The distribution coefficient (K) of iodine on microplastics is positively correlated with biofilm biomass, which signifies the role of biofilm in radioiodine uptake. The K indicates microplastics are potential iodide accumulators and could be a possible vector in the marine system.

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