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Microplastic extraction protocols can impact the polymer structure

Microplastics and Nanoplastics 2021 79 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Christian Roth, Thilo Hofmann, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Christian Roth, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Christian Roth, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Lars Meyer, Patrizia Pfohl, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Till Gruendling, Till Gruendling, Thilo Hofmann, Till Gruendling, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Ute Heinemeyer, Thilo Hofmann, Till Gruendling, Ute Heinemeyer, Christian Roth, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Till Gruendling, Christian Roth, Thilo Hofmann, Lars Meyer, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Till Gruendling, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Till Gruendling, Thilo Hofmann, Lars Meyer, Thilo Hofmann, Christiane Lang, Christiane Lang, Thilo Hofmann, Patrizia Pfohl, Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Patrizia Pfohl, Patrizia Pfohl, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Nikolaus Nestle, Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Patrizia Pfohl, Thilo Hofmann, Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Sarah Jessl, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Thilo Hofmann, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben

Summary

Researchers found that common laboratory extraction protocols used to isolate microplastics from environmental samples can alter the polymer structure of the particles, potentially skewing identification and quantification results.

Polymers

Abstract Although microplastics are ubiquitous in today’s natural environments, our understanding of the materials, quantities, and particle sizes involved remains limited. The recovery of microplastics from different types of environmental matrices requires standardized matrix digestion protocols that allow inter-laboratory comparisons and that have no effect on the polymers themselves. A number of commonly used digestion methods rely on oxidation with concentrated hydrogen peroxide solutions to remove organic matter from the matrix. However, this can alter the nature of polymers through hydrolysis and often does not lead to a complete matrix removal. We have therefore investigated the use of two altered matrix digestion protocols, an acidic (Fenton) protocol and a new alkaline (Basic Piranha) protocol, focusing mainly on the effect on biodegradable polymers (polylactide, polybutylene adipate terephthalate, polybutylene succinate) and polymers with known degradation pathways via hydrolysis (thermoplastic polyurethanes, polyamide). Comparing the initial surface textures, chemical compositions, and particle size distributions with those obtained after digestion revealed that the Fenton protocol left most of the polymers unchanged. The ferrous residue that remains following Fenton digestion had no effect on either the polymer composition or the particle size distribution, but could disturb further analytics (e.g. Raman microscopy due to auto-fluorescence). While increasing the chance of complete matrix removal, the more powerful Basic Piranha protocol is also more likely to affect the polymer properties: Polylactide polymers in particular showed signs of degradation under alkaline digestion (reduced polylactide content, holes in the polymer matrix), indicating the unsuitability of the Basic Piranha protocol in this specific case. Polyamide, however, remained stable during the Basic Piranha treatment, and the surface chemistry, the particle size as well as the molar mass distribution of the investigated thermoplastic polyurethanes were also not affected. Hence, this protocol offers a powerful alternative for microplastic analysis with focus on particle size in more complex environmental matrices (e.g. removal of cellulose in soil), while avoiding ferrous Fenton residue. Unexpectedly, also tire rubber, a frequent target analyte in microplastic monitoring, was found to be susceptible to artefact structures by both oxidation protocols. In summary, controls for the specific combination of polymer and sample preparation protocol are highly recommended to select the most fitting protocol. Here selected suitable combinations are reported.

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