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Classification and distribution of freshwater microplastics along the Italian Po river by hyperspectral imaging

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2022 83 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.
Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Ludovica Fiore, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Ludovica Fiore, Ludovica Fiore, Ludovica Fiore, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Cristina Mazziotti, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Elena Riccardi, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Cristina Mazziotti, Elena Riccardi, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Margherita Benzi, Silvia Serranti, Margherita Benzi, Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Margherita Benzi, Margherita Benzi, Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Giuseppe Bonifazi Silvia Serranti, Silvia Serranti, Cristina Mazziotti, Cristina Mazziotti, Elena Riccardi, Giuseppe Bonifazi Elena Riccardi, Giuseppe Bonifazi

Summary

Researchers used hyperspectral imaging to classify and map the distribution of freshwater microplastics collected from four stations along Italy's Po River, correlating microplastic categories with polymer types and morphological features.

Study Type Environmental

In this work, freshwater microplastic samples collected from four different stations along the Italian Po river were characterized in terms of abundance, distribution, category, morphological and morphometrical features, and polymer type. The correlation between microplastic category and polymer type was also evaluated. Polymer identification was carried out developing and implementing a new and effective hierarchical classification logic applied to hyperspectral images acquired in the short-wave infrared range (SWIR: 1000-2500 nm). Results showed that concentration of microplastics ranged from 1.89 to 8.22 particles/m, the most abundant category was fragment, followed by foam, granule, pellet, and filament and the most diffused polymers were expanded polystyrene followed by polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, polyamide, polyethylene terephthalate and polyvinyl chloride, with some differences in polymer distribution among stations. The application of hyperspectral imaging (HSI) as a rapid and non-destructive method to classify freshwater microplastics for environmental monitoring represents a completely innovative approach in this field.

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