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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. Sign in to save

Methods for separating microplastics from complex solid matrices: Comparative analysis

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 134 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.
Defu He Xiaoting Zhang, Xiaoting Zhang, Jiani Hu, Jiani Hu, Jiani Hu, Defu He Defu He Defu He Xiaoting Zhang, Xiaoting Zhang, Jiani Hu, Defu He Xiaoting Zhang, Xiaoting Zhang, Defu He Xiaoting Zhang, Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Jiani Hu, Jiani Hu, Jiani Hu, Xiaoting Zhang, Xiaoting Zhang, Xiaoting Zhang, Jiani Hu, Defu He Jiani Hu, Defu He Xiaoting Zhang, Defu He Defu He Jiani Hu, Defu He Defu He Jiani Hu, Jiani Hu, Xiaoting Zhang, Defu He Defu He Defu He Xiaoting Zhang, Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He Defu He

Summary

Separation methods for extracting microplastics from complex solid matrices including soil, sediment, and sludge were systematically compared, evaluating density separation, oil extraction, electrostatic separation, and other approaches. The review provides guidance for choosing appropriate separation methods depending on matrix composition and target microplastic characteristics.

Microplastics (MPs) are widely found in complex solid matrices such as soil, sediments and sludge. The separation procedure is crucial for effective analysis of MPs, but existing methods varied among studies. Here, we systematically summarize and compare separation methods including density, oil, electrostatic, magnetic, and solvent extraction separation. Density separation is the most commonly used approach, but time-consuming and discharging hazardous materials dependent on extraction solutions. In contrast, oil, electrostatic, magnetic separation and solvent extraction separation are emerging approaches with advantages of low-cost, quick, or environmentally-friendly, but with high request of instruments. Despite variation among these approaches, the separation efficiency is closely related to characteristics of MPs including polymer types, sizes and shapes. The treatment of digestion and fluorescence staining can facilitate the detection of MPs. This analysis suggests that further optimization and improvement of existing approaches can facilitate the development of new separation technology for assaying MPs in complex environmental matrices.

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