0
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. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Remediation Sign in to save

Electric clothes dryers: An underestimated source of microfiber pollution

PLoS ONE 2020 99 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.
Kirsten J. Kapp, Rachael Z. Miller

Summary

Researchers measured microfibre emissions from residential electric clothes dryers, finding polyester fibres distributed throughout a 9-metre radius from dryer vents and significant lint accumulation in dryer exhaust. The study highlighted electric clothes dryers as an underestimated direct atmospheric pathway for microfibre pollution, distinct from the washing machine and wastewater route.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics, particularly microfibers, are ubiquitous, found in aquatic (freshwater and marine) and terrestrial environments and within the food web worldwide. It is well-established that microplastics in the form of textile fibers enter the environment via washing machines and wastewater treatment effluent. Less is known about the release of microfibers from electric clothes dryers. In this study we measure microfiber emissions from home installed dryers at two different sites. At each site the distribution of fibers landing on the snow's surface outside dryer vents and the weight of lint in dryer exhaust exiting dryer vents were measured. Fibers from the pink polyester fleece blankets used in this study were found in plots throughout a 30ft (9.14m) radius from the dryer vents, with an average number across all plots of 404 ± 192 (SD) (Site 1) and 1,169 ± 606 (SD) (Site 2). The majority of the fibers collected were located within 5 ft (1.52m) of the vents. Averages of 35 ± 16(SD)mg (Site 1) and 70 ± 77 (SD)mg (Site 2) of lint from three consecutive dry cycles were collected from dryer vent exhaust. This study establishes that electric clothes dryers emit masses of microfiber directly into the environment. Microfiber emissions vary based on dryer type, age, vent installation and lint trap characteristics. Therefore, dryers should be included in discussions when considering strategies, policies and innovations to prevent and mitigate microfiber pollution.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Commercial clothes dryers: a source of microfiber emissions to air

Researchers quantified microfiber emissions from commercial clothes dryers and measured deposition patterns around laundromats, identifying commercial dryers as a significant and poorly studied source of airborne microplastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Airborne emissions of microplastic fibres from domestic laundry dryers

Domestic tumble dryers were confirmed as a source of airborne microplastic fibers, with samples taken during operation containing significantly more fibers than background air levels. The study is the first to measure microplastic fiber emissions from mechanical drying, identifying indoor air as a key exposure environment.

Article Tier 2

The impact of fabric conditioning products and lint filter pore size on airborne microfiber pollution arising from tumble drying

Researchers found that vented tumble dryers release significant quantities of synthetic microfibers into the external environment, with fiber release influenced by fabric conditioning products and lint filter pore size, identifying household dryers as an underappreciated source of airborne microplastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Co-emission of Siloxane Compounds with Polyester Nanofibers from Household Laundry Dryer Exhaust

Scientists found that clothes dryers release tiny plastic fibers and chemical compounds into the air when drying synthetic fabrics like polyester. These microscopic particles are so small they can potentially be breathed into our lungs, though researchers don't yet know what health effects this might have. This study shows that doing laundry creates a new source of airborne plastic pollution that we're only just beginning to understand.

Article Tier 2

Impact of vented and condenser tumble dryers on waterborne and airborne microfiber pollution

Tumble dryers are a significant and underappreciated source of microfiber pollution: vented dryers release microfibers into outdoor air through their exhaust ducts, while condenser dryers discharge them into wastewater when users rinse out lint filters. The study found that real consumer laundry loads released surprisingly high total microfiber levels (over 340 ppm) across both dryer types. This means household drying is an important missing piece in efforts to curb textile microfiber pollution, alongside the more studied problem of washing machine emissions.

Share this paper