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LDPE and HDPE Microplastics Differently Affect the Transport of Tetracycline in Saturated Porous Media
Summary
Researchers compared how two types of polyethylene microplastics (LDPE and HDPE) affect the movement of the antibiotic tetracycline through soil, finding that HDPE more strongly retarded tetracycline transport. This shows that different plastic types can alter the spread of antibiotic contamination in soils, with implications for both groundwater quality and antibiotic resistance.
The accumulation of microplastics (MPs) in soil and sediments may influence the penetration of contaminants into subsurface environments. However, little attention has been paid to comparing the different roles of two common polyethylene (PE) types—low-density polyethylene (LDPE) and high-density polyethylene (HDPE). In this study, the transport behaviors of tetracycline in saturated quartz sand columns in the presence and absence of these two MPs were investigated, respectively. The results showed that both types of PE MPs restrained the mobility of tetracycline at neutral conditions, while such detrimental effects were weak at acid and alkaline conditions. The degree of nonequilibrium adsorption was higher, and tetracycline transferred easier to the kinetic site for the existence of LDPE than of HDPE. The increased roughness and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface areas, more negative zeta potentials and the formation of oxygen function groups on the surface of MPs after UV-weathering intensified the retardation of tetracycline transport. This study revealed that the PE type and weathering should be taken into account in risk assessment, along with the solution chemistry.