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Surface properties and rising velocities of pristine and weathered plastic pellets

Environmental Science Processes & Impacts 2022 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Tom Bond, Jack K. Morton, Zeinab Al‐Rekabi, David J. H. Cant, Stuart Davidson, Yiwen Pei

Summary

Researchers compared surface properties and rising velocities of pristine and weathered plastic production pellets, finding that experimental rising velocities for beach-collected weathered polyethylene pellets ranged from 2.36 to 10.56 cm/s and that theoretical predictions consistently overestimated velocities by 136%, with atomic force microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy confirming increased surface oxidation and roughness from weathering.

Study Type Environmental

This study compared the surface properties and rising velocities of pristine and weathered plastic production pellets, to evaluate impacts of environmental conditions. Rising velocities were measured for 140 weathered pellets collected from a Spanish beach and compared with pristine low-density polyethylene, high-density polyethylene and polypropylene pellets. A subset of 49 weathered pellets were analysed by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), with all found to be polyethylene. Experimental rising velocities for the weathered pellets varied widely, from (2.36 ± 0.01) cm s-1 to (10.56 ± 0.26) cm s-1, with a mean value of (5.79 ± 0.06) cm s-1. Theoretical rising velocities were consistently higher than experimental velocities for all pellet types: on average 136% of experimental values for weathered pellets. This discrepancy was more distinct for less spherical pellets, which were often more weathered. Flatter pellets often oscillated as they rose, which explains at least some of this finding. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) analysis revealed that the roughness of the pristine and weathered pellets was (59 ± 11) nm, and (74 ± 26) nm respectively. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis showed that the proportion of surface oxidised carbon species were 2.3% and 4.0% of the total carbon signal for a pristine and a weathered pellet, respectively; consistent with photochemical reactions changing the surface chemistry of weathered pellets. As determined by density column, weathered pellets had slightly lower experimental densities than pristine pellets. Overall, this study illustrates why it is important that modelling studies on the environmental fate and/or movements of microplastics validate or correct predictions using experimental data.

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