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 Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Airborne Microplastic Concentrations in Five Megacities of Northern and Southeast China

Environmental Science & Technology 2021 170 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wei Huang, Mingzhu Fang, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Mingzhu Fang, Xuan Zhu, Xu Shang Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Xu Shang Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Randy A. Dahlgren, Mingzhu Fang, Zhonglu Liao, Mingzhu Fang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Xuan Zhu, Zhonglu Liao, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Randy A. Dahlgren, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Yiqing Wang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Zhonglu Liao, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Xuan Zhu, Changjie Lu, Lisha Xu, Changjie Lu, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Randy A. Dahlgren, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Chenwei Shi, Mingzhu Fang, Mingzhu Fang, Chenwei Shi, Randy A. Dahlgren, Randy A. Dahlgren, Qianqian Mu, Randy A. Dahlgren, Wei Huang, Randy A. Dahlgren, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Randy A. Dahlgren, Randy A. Dahlgren, Randy A. Dahlgren, Chenwei Shi, Chenwei Shi, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Changjie Lu, Xu Shang Xu Shang Wei Huang, Changjie Lu, Wei Huang, Xu Shang Xu Shang Xu Shang Huanhuan Deng, Randy A. Dahlgren, Huanhuan Deng, Randy A. Dahlgren, Randy A. Dahlgren, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Wei Huang, Randy A. Dahlgren, Xu Shang Randy A. Dahlgren, Wei Huang, Xu Shang Xu Shang Xu Shang Xu Shang

Summary

Researchers used uniform sampling methods to measure airborne microplastic concentrations across five major cities in northern and southeastern China. They found that indoor environments generally had higher microplastic levels than outdoor air, with fibers being the most common particle type. The study provides some of the first directly comparable data on airborne microplastic exposure across multiple cities, suggesting that people in densely populated areas face meaningful inhalation risks.

Polymers
Body Systems

Airborne microplastics (MPs) are receiving increasing attention due to their ubiquitous nature and the potential human health consequences resulting from inhalation. The limited data for airborne MP concentrations vary widely among studies (∼4 orders of magnitude), but comparisons are tenuous due to the inconsistent collection and detection/enumeration methodologies among studies. Herein, we used uniform methodologies to obtain comparable airborne MP concentration data to assess MP exposure intensity in five Chinese megacities. Airborne MP concentrations in northern cities (358 ± 132 items/m<sup>3</sup>) were higher than those in southeast cities (230 ± 94 items/m<sup>3</sup>) but of a similar order of magnitude, unlike previous studies. The majority (94.7%) of MPs found in air samples were smaller than 100 μm, and the main shape of airborne MPs was fragments (88.2%). Polyethylene, polyester, and polystyrene were the dominant polymers comprising airborne MPs. No consistent relationships were detected between airborne MP concentration and typical socioeconomic indices, and the spatial and diurnal patterns for airborne MPs were different from various components of air quality indices (PM<sub>2.5</sub>, PM<sub>10</sub>, etc.). These findings reflect the contrasting source/generation dynamics between airborne MPs and other airborne pollutants. Maximum annual exposure of humans to airborne MPs was estimated in the range of 1-2 million/year in these megacities, highlighting the need for additional research examining the human health risks from the inhalation of airborne MPs.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper