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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

Leaching of microplastic-associated additives in aquatic environments: A critical review

Environmental Pollution 2022 181 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Anh T. Ngoc, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Anh T. Ngoc, Yeonjeong Ha, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Anh T. Ngoc, Yeonjeong Ha, Yeonjeong Ha, Yeonjeong Ha, Anh T. Ngoc, Yeonjeong Ha, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Yeonjeong Ha, Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon Jung‐Hwan Kwon

Summary

This review examined how microplastic-associated chemical additives leach into aquatic environments, summarizing recent advances in understanding release kinetics, phase equilibrium between microplastics and water, and the environmental and health risks posed by organic additives and heavy metals.

Microplastic pollution has attracted significant attention as an emerging global environmental problem. One of the most important issues with microplastics is the leaching of harmful additives. This review summarizes the recent advances in the understanding of the leaching phenomena in the context of the phase equilibrium between microplastics and water, and the release kinetics. Organic additives, which are widely used in plastic products, have been introduced because they have diverse physicochemical properties and mass fractions in plastics. Many theoretical and empirical models have been utilized in laboratory and field studies. However, the partition or distribution constant between microplastics and water (K) and the diffusivity of an additive in microplastics (D) are the two key properties explaining the leaching equilibrium and kinetics of hydrophobic organic additives. Because microplastics in aquatic environments undergo dynamic weathering, leaching of organic additives with high K and/or low D cannot be described by a leaching model that only considers microplastic and water phases with a fixed boundary. Surface modifications of microplastics as well as biofilms colonizing microplastic surfaces can alter the leaching equilibrium and kinetics and transform additives. Further studies on the release of hydrophobic organic additives and their transformation products under various conditions are required to extend our understanding of the environmental fate and transport of these additives in aquatic environments.

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