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New methodologies for the detection, identification, and quantification of microplastics and their environmental degradation by-products

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2021 84 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.
Valter Castelvetro, Andrea Corti, Greta Biale, Alessio Ceccarini, Ilaria Degano, Jacopo La Nasa, Tommaso Lomonaco, Antonella Manariti, Enrico Manco, Francesca Modugno, Virginia Vinciguerra

Summary

This review covers new methodologies for sampling, detecting, identifying, and quantifying microplastics and their environmental degradation byproducts in natural water systems, highlighting advances in spectroscopic, mass spectrometric, and imaging-based approaches.

Study Type Environmental

Sampling, separation, detection, and characterization of microplastics (MPs) dispersed in natural water bodies and ecosystems is a challenging and critical issue for a better understanding of the hazards for the environment posed by such nearly ubiquitous and still largely unknown form of pollution. There is still the need for exhaustive, reliable, accurate, reasonably fast, and cost-efficient analytical protocols allowing the quantification not only of MPs but also of nanoplastics (NPs) and of the harmful molecular pollutants that may result from degrading plastics. Here a set of newly developed analytical protocols, integrated with specialized techniques such as pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS), for the accurate and selective determination of the polymers most commonly found as MPs polluting marine and freshwater sediments are presented. In addition, the results of an investigation on the low molecular weight volatile organic compounds (VOCs) released upon photo-oxidative degradation of microplastics highlight the important role of photoinduced fragmentation at a molecular level both as a potential source of hazardous chemicals and as accelerators of the overall degradation of floating or stranded plastic debris.

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