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Development of a low-cost method for quantifying microplastics in soils and compost using near-infrared spectroscopy

Measurement Science and Technology 2022 42 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.
Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Andrea Paul, Andrea Paul, Andrea Paul, Lukas Wander, Lukas Wander, Lukas Wander, Lukas Wander, Lukas Wander, Lukas Wander, L. Lommel, L. Lommel, Lukas Wander, Braun, Ulrike Klas Meyer, Klas Meyer, Klas Meyer, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Andrea Paul, Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Andrea Paul, Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike Braun, Ulrike

Summary

Near-infrared spectroscopy was developed as a low-cost, non-destructive method to quantify microplastic mass in soil and compost samples, with sensitivity improved through spectral preprocessing techniques. The method offers a practical alternative to time-consuming visual counting or expensive chemical analysis for high-throughput soil monitoring.

Abstract Near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy is a promising candidate for low-cost, nondestructive, and high-throughput mass quantification of microplastics in environmental samples. Widespread application of the technique is currently hampered mainly by the low sensitivity of NIR spectroscopy compared to thermoanalytical approaches commonly used for this type of analysis. This study shows how the application of NIR spectroscopy for mass quantification of microplastics can be extended to smaller analyte levels by combining it with a simple and rapid microplastic enrichment protocol. For this purpose, the widely used flotation of microplastics in a NaCl solution, accelerated by centrifugation, was chosen which allowed to remove up to 99% of the matrix at recovery rates of 83%–104%. The spectroscopic measurements took place directly on the stainless-steel filters used to collect the extracted particles to reduce sample handling to a minimum. Partial least squares regression models were used to identify and quantify the extracted microplastics in the mass range of 1–10 mg. The simple and fast extraction procedure was systematically optimized to meet the requirements for the quantification of microplastics from common polyethylene-, polypropylene-, and polystyrene-based packaging materials with a particle size <1 mm found in compost or soils with high natural organic matter content (>10% determined by loss on ignition). Microplastics could be detected in model samples at a mass fraction of 1 mg g −1 . The detectable microplastic mass fraction is about an order of magnitude lower compared to previous studies using NIR spectroscopy without additional enrichment. To emphasize the cost-effectiveness of the method, it was implemented using some of the cheapest and most compact NIR spectrometers available.

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