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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Field-Portable Microplastic Sensing in Aqueous Environments: A Perspective on Emerging Techniques

Sensors 2021 44 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Morgan Blevins, Harry Allen, Beckett C. Colson, Anna‐Marie Cook, Alexandra Z. Greenbaum, S.S. Hemami, Joseph L. Hollmann, Ernest Kim, Ava LaRocca, Kenneth Markoski, P.Q. Miraglia, Vienna L. Mott, William Robberson, José A. L. Santos, Melissa M. Sprachman, Patricia Swierk, Steven Tate, Mark F. Witinski, Louis B. Kratchman, Anna P. M. Michel

Summary

This review examines emerging field-portable technologies for detecting and quantifying microplastics in aqueous environments, discussing optical, spectroscopic, and electrochemical sensing approaches. Researchers identify the lack of a standardized, rapid on-site method as the primary bottleneck limiting accurate real-world microplastic monitoring.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) have been found in aqueous environments ranging from rural ponds and lakes to the deep ocean. Despite the ubiquity of MPs, our ability to characterize MPs in the environment is limited by the lack of technologies for rapidly and accurately identifying and quantifying MPs. Although standards exist for MP sample collection and preparation, methods of MP analysis vary considerably and produce data with a broad range of data content and quality. The need for extensive analysis-specific sample preparation in current technology approaches has hindered the emergence of a single technique which can operate on aqueous samples in the field, rather than on dried laboratory preparations. In this perspective, we consider MP measurement technologies with a focus on both their eventual field-deployability and their respective data products (e.g., MP particle count, size, and/or polymer type). We present preliminary demonstrations of several prospective MP measurement techniques, with an eye towards developing a solution or solutions that can transition from the laboratory to the field. Specifically, experimental results are presented from multiple prototype systems that measure various physical properties of MPs: pyrolysis-differential mobility spectroscopy, short-wave infrared imaging, aqueous Nile Red labeling and counting, acoustophoresis, ultrasound, impedance spectroscopy, and dielectrophoresis.

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