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A microscopic survey on microplastics in beverages: the case of beer, mineral water and tea
Summary
Researchers tested beer, bottled mineral water, and tea from around the world and found microplastics in every sample without exception. Beer contained 20 to 80 microplastic particles per milliliter, mineral water about 10 per milliliter, and tea leaves carried 200 to 500 per gram, with different plastic types identified in each beverage. The findings highlight that everyday drinks are a routine source of microplastic exposure for consumers.
It has been reported that microplastics exist ubiquitously in aquatic and terrestrial environments. Microplastic surveys on diverse daily foods with high consumption possibly containing microplastics have essential implications in clarifying the contamination routes, health risk assessment, and thereby preventing food pollution. Given the dependence of microplastic pollution on the regional environment, production and transportation, it further remains an open question on the number, size distribution and type of microplastics in foods from different countries worldwide. Here, we show that daily drinks produced worldwide, including beer, mineral water and tea, are all polluted with microplastics without exception. The number of microplastics investigated in this work lies in the range of 20-80 mL<sup>-1</sup> for the beers, 10 mL<sup>-1</sup> for the bottled mineral water, and 200-500 g<sup>-1</sup> for the tea leaves. Quasi-spherical particles and irregular fragments dominate the shape of microplastics in beer and mineral water, whereas tea leaves carry numerous microplastic fibers. By identification through Raman spectroscopy, we observed the presence of polystyrene (PS) and polypropylene (PP) microplastics in beers, PP in bottled mineral water, and polyethylene (PE) and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) in tea leaves. Possible contamination sources include raw materials, atmosphere, and tools and containers that release microplastics. Given the facile adsorption of heavy metals and antibiotics to microplastics in beverages, public concern may arise regarding the accumulation of microplastics through the food chain and their synergetic harmful effect. Thus, our results should inspire further efforts that may contribute to the elimination and removal of microplastics from foods.
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