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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. Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

An effective strategy for the monitoring of microplastics in complex aquatic matrices: Exploiting the potential of near infrared hyperspectral imaging (NIR-HSI)

Chemosphere 2021 35 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.
Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Giorgia Sciutto, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Giorgia Sciutto, Laura Airoldi Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Giorgia Sciutto, Giorgia Sciutto, Laura Airoldi Laura Airoldi Cristina Malegori, Laura Airoldi Stefania Piarulli, Stefania Piarulli, Giorgia Sciutto, Cristina Malegori, Cristina Malegori, Silvia Prati, Ferrante Grasselli, Paolo Oliveri, Cristina Malegori, Stefania Piarulli, Laura Airoldi Silvia Prati, Silvia Prati, Laura Airoldi Silvia Prati, Laura Airoldi Rocco Mazzeo, Silvia Prati, Silvia Prati, Stefania Piarulli, Laura Airoldi Rocco Mazzeo, Rocco Mazzeo, Giorgia Sciutto, Giorgia Sciutto, Laura Airoldi Stefania Piarulli, Giorgia Sciutto, Rocco Mazzeo, Rocco Mazzeo, Laura Airoldi Silvia Prati, Paolo Oliveri, Silvia Prati, Rocco Mazzeo, Rocco Mazzeo, Rocco Mazzeo, Laura Airoldi Laura Airoldi

Summary

Researchers developed a near infrared hyperspectral imaging (NIR-HSI) method for rapid monitoring of microplastics in complex marine matrices, demonstrating effective detection and polymer identification that overcomes the time and cost limitations of conventional spectroscopic analysis approaches.

Contamination by microplastics (MP) represents a critical environmental challenge with potential consequences at ecosystem, economic and societal levels. As the marine system is the final sink for MP, there is an urgent need to develop methods for the monitoring of synthetic particles in different marine compartments and sample matrices. Extensive evaluations are hindered by time and costs associated with to conventional MP spectroscopic analyses. The potential of near infrared hyperspectral imaging (NIR-HSI) has been recently evaluated. However, NIR-HSI has been poorly studied so far, limitedly to the detection of large particles (>300 μm), and its capability for direct characterization of MP in real marine matrices has not been considered yet. In the present study, a rapid near infrared hyperspectral imaging (NIR-HSI) method, coupled with a customised normalised difference image (NDI) strategy for data processing, is presented and used to detect MP down to 50 μm in environmental matrices. The proposed method is largely automated, without the need for extensive data processing, and enabled a successful identification of different polymers, both in surface water and mussel soft tissue samples, as well as on real field samples with environmentally occurring MP. NIR-HSI is applied directly on filters, without the need for particles pre-sorting or multiple sample purifications, avoiding time consuming procedures, airborne contaminations, particle degradation and loss. Thanks to the time and cost effectiveness, a large-scale implementation of this method would enable to extensively monitor the MP presence in natural environments for assessing the ecological risk related to MP contamination.

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