0
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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Selection of a density separation solution to study microplastics in tropical riverine sediment

Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 2022 78 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Thi Thuy Duong, Phuong Thu Le, Thi Nhu Huong Nguyen, Thi Quynh Hoang, Ha My Ngo, Đoàn Thị Yến Oanh, Thi Phuong Quynh Le, Huyen Thuong Bui, Hà Mạnh Bùi, Van Tuyen Trinh, Thuy Lien Nguyen, Nhu Da Le, Thanh Mai Vu, Tran Thi Kim, Tu Cuong Ho, Ngọc Nam Phương, Emilie Strady

Summary

A comparison of density separation solutions for extracting microplastics from tropical riverine sediment found that sodium iodide and zinc chloride achieved higher recovery rates than sodium chloride for dense polymers, but cost and environmental safety concerns favor NaCl for use in developing countries.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) are small (< 5 mm) plastic particles that are widely found in marine, freshwater, terrestrial and atmospheric environments. Due to their prevalence and persistence, MPs are considered an emerging contaminant of environmental concern. The separation and quantitation of MPs from freshwater sediments is a challenging and critical issue. It is necessary to identify the fate and sources of MPs in the environment, minimise their release and adverse effects. Compared to marine sediments, standardised methods for extracting and estimating the amount of MPs in freshwater sediments are relatively limited. The present study focuses on MP recovery efficiency of four commonly used salt solutions (NaCl, NaI, CaCl and ZnCl) for isolating MPs during the density separation step from freshwater sediment. Known combinations of artificial MP particles (PS, PE, PVC, PET, PP and HDPE) were spiked into standard river sediment. Extraction using NaI, ZnCl and NaCl solutions resulted in higher recovery rates from 37 to 97% compared to the CaCl solution (28-83%) and varied between polymer types. Low-density MPs (PE, HDPE, PP and PS) were more effectively recovered (> 87%) than the denser polymers (PET and PVC: 37 to 88.8%) using NaCl, NaI and ZnCl solutions. However, the effective flotation of ZnCl and NaI solutions is relatively expensive and unsafe to the environment, especially in the context of developing countries. Therefore, considering the efficiency, cost and environmental criteria, NaCl solution was selected. The protocol was then tested by extracting MPs from nine riverine sediment samples from the Red River Delta. Sediments collected from urban rivers were highly polluted by MPs (26,000 MPs items·kg DW) compared to sediments located downstream. Using a NaCl solution was found to be effective in this case study and might also be used in long-term and large-scale MP monitoring programmes in Vietnam.

Share this paper