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Sample Preparation Techniques for the Analysis of Microplastics in Soil—A Review

Sustainability 2020 224 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.
Berit Schütze, Daniela Thomas, Daniela Thomas, Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Berit Schütze, Daniela Thomas, Daniela Thomas, Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Zacharias Steinmetz Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Berit Schütze, Daniela Thomas, Daniela Thomas, Zacharias Steinmetz Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Zacharias Steinmetz Wiebke Mareile Heinze, Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz Zacharias Steinmetz

Summary

Sample preparation techniques for microplastic analysis in soil were reviewed and compared, noting that methods developed for aquatic systems are often inadequate for the complexity of soil matrices. The review highlights newly developed soil-specific methods and emphasizes the need for standardization to enable reliable comparison of terrestrial microplastic data.

Although most plastic pollution originates on land, current research largely remains focused on aquatic ecosystems. Studies pioneering terrestrial microplastic research have adapted analytical methods from aquatic research without acknowledging the complex nature of soil. Meanwhile, novel methods have been developed and further refined. However, methodical inconsistencies still challenge a comprehensive understanding of microplastic occurrence and fate in and on soil. This review aims to disentangle the variety of state-of-the-art sample preparation techniques for heterogeneous solid matrices to identify and discuss best-practice methods for soil-focused microplastic analyses. We show that soil sampling, homogenization, and aggregate dispersion are often neglected or incompletely documented. Microplastic preconcentration is typically performed by separating inorganic soil constituents with high-density salt solutions. Not yet standardized but currently most used separation setups involve overflowing beakers to retrieve supernatant plastics, although closed-design separation funnels probably reduce the risk of contamination. Fenton reagent may be particularly useful to digest soil organic matter if suspected to interfere with subsequent microplastic quantification. A promising new approach is extraction of target polymers with organic solvents. However, insufficiently characterized soils still impede an informed decision on optimal sample preparation. Further research and method development thus requires thorough validation and quality control with well-characterized matrices to enable robust routine analyses for terrestrial microplastics.

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