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Seeping plastics: Potentially harmful molecular fragments leaching out from microplastics during accelerated ageing in seawater

Water Research 2022 75 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Greta Biale, Jacopo La Nasa, Marco Mattonai, Andrea Corti, Valter Castelvetro, Francesca Modugno

Summary

Researchers conducted accelerated aging experiments on four common plastic types in seawater to study the chemical compounds they release as they degrade. The study found that aging microplastics leach potentially harmful molecular fragments into the surrounding water, demonstrating that microplastics are not inert pollutants but chemically reactive materials that release degradation byproducts over time.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics are the particulate plastic debris found almost everywhere as environmental contaminants. They are not chemically stable persistent pollutants, but reactive materials. In fact, synthetic polymers exposed to the environment undergo chemical and physical degradation processes which lead not only to mechanical but also molecular fragmentation, releasing compounds that are potentially harmful for the environment and human health. We carried out accelerated photo-oxidative ageing of four reference microplastics (low- and high-density polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene) directly in artificial seawater. We then made a characterization at the molecular level along with a quantification of the chemical species leached into water. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analyses performed after selective extraction and derivatization enabled us to identify more than 60 different compounds. Analysis of the leachates from the three polyolefins revealed that the main degradation products were mono- and dicarboxylic acids, along with linear and branched hydroxy acids. The highest amount of leached degradation species was observed for polystyrene, with benzoic acid and phenol derivatives as the most abundant, along with oligomeric styrene derivatives. The results from reference microplastics were then compared with those obtained by analyzing leachates in artificial seawater from aged plastic debris collected in a natural environment. The differences observed between the reference and the environmental plastic leachates mainly concerned the relative abundances of the chemical species detected, with the environmental samples showing higher amounts of dicarboxylic acids and oxidized species.

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