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Contrasting effects of microplastics on sorption of diazepam and phenanthrene in soil

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 72 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Dan Huang, Baile Xu, Baile Xu, Dan Huang, Baile Xu, Zhijiang Lu, Fei Liu, Fei Liu, Jay Gan, Fei Liu, Jay Gan, Fei Liu, Baile Xu, Dan Huang, David Alfaro, Jay Gan, Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Baile Xu, Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Zhijiang Lu, Zhijiang Lu, Zhijiang Lu, Zhijiang Lu, Zhijiang Lu, Zhijiang Lu, Caixian Tang, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Jianming Xu Zhijiang Lu, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Jay Gan, Baile Xu, Zhijiang Lu, Jianming Xu Jay Gan, Caixian Tang, Jay Gan, Jianming Xu Jianming Xu

Summary

Researchers found contrasting effects of polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene microplastics on the sorption of diazepam and phenanthrene in two soil types, with microplastics decreasing overall sorption of polar diazepam at 10% addition while increasing sorption of nonpolar phenanthrene at 1% addition. The results highlight that microplastic type and concentration interact with pollutant polarity to determine net sorption outcomes in soil.

Microplastics have attracted extensive attention regarding their role in the cycling of organic pollutants in aquatic environments. However, the influence of microplastics on the sorption of organic pollutants in soil is unclear. Herein, we investigated the sorption of polar diazepam and nonpolar phenanthrene to two soils (Inceptisol and Oxisol). Batch sorption experiments were used to evaluate the effect of polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and polystyrene (PS) microplastics at addition rates of 0.1%, 1%, and 10% (w/w). The addition of microplastics significantly decreased the overall sorption of diazepam at 10%, and increased the sorption of phenanthrene at 1%, while the effects were negligible at other addition rates. Decreased sorption of diazepam was attributed to its lower sorption affinity to microplastics than to soil. Microplastics, even at 0.1%, substantially decreased the relative distribution of phenanthrene in soil, particularly for PE in the Oxisol with lower f. The sorption affinity of phenanthrene followed the order PE > soil organic carbon (SOC) > PP > PS, suggesting that PE can be a significant sink of phenanthrene in contaminated soils. Overall, microplastics can change the sorption of diazepam and phenanthrene to soil and therefore affect their mobility and environmental risk in soil ecosystems.

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