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Characterization and source analysis of heavy metals contamination in microplastics by Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy

Chemosphere 2021 41 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xi Chen, Shujat Ali, Leiming Yuan, Fengyi Guo, Guangzao Huang, Wen Shi, Xiaojing Chen

Summary

Researchers used Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) to characterize and identify the sources of heavy metals contaminating microplastics collected from a remote coral island. LIBS proved an effective rapid analytical technique for trace metal determination in microplastics, avoiding the complex sample pretreatments required by conventional methods.

The increasing presence of microplastics in marine environment is a critical issue and the plastic-metal contamination has received much attention. However, conventional methods for heavy metal determination are time-consuming, need sample pretreatments, require a strict operation environment, or have high limits of detection. In this study, heavy metals contaminated microplastics samples collected from a remote coral island were quantified and analyzed by using Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS). The characters of the trace metals in microplastics were used to determine the sources of the contaminants, and the potential origins of the metals were demonstrated from the statistical analysis. LIBS is a facile and non-destructive trace analysis technique and the strategy led to rapid and multi-metals detection of individual samples. Heavy metals such as copper (Cu), lead (Pb), iron (Fe), cadmium (Cd), zinc (Zn), manganese (Mn), chromium (Cr) were detected and quantified in the individual microplastics samples. The findings showed that LIBS is a promising strategy for the characterization of microplastics and for the analysis of the source of heavy metals contaminants present in the microplastics particles.

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