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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. Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Interactions between microplastics and oil dispersion in the marine environment

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2020 80 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.
Xiaying Xin, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Baiyu Zhang, Xiaying Xin, Min Yang, Bing Chen Bing Chen Bing Chen Min Yang, Baiyu Zhang, Min Yang, Bing Chen Bing Chen Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Min Yang, Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Min Yang, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Bing Chen Baiyu Zhang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Min Yang, Xiaying Xin, Bing Chen Kenneth Lee, Kenneth Lee, Xiaying Xin, Bing Chen Kenneth Lee, Kenneth Lee, Guihua Dong, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Xing Song, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Xiaying Xin, Bing Chen Jiabin Liu, Baiyu Zhang, Min Yang, Bing Chen Bing Chen Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Bing Chen Baiyu Zhang, Kenneth Lee, Kenneth Lee, Baiyu Zhang, Bing Chen Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Kenneth Lee, Bing Chen Guihua Dong, Kenneth Lee, Guihua Dong, Xing Song, Kenneth Lee, Bing Chen Min Yang, Baiyu Zhang, Bing Chen Kenneth Lee, Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Kenneth Lee, Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Baiyu Zhang, Bing Chen

Summary

Researchers investigated interactions between microplastics and crude oil in marine environments, finding that microplastics adsorb oil components and can reduce the effectiveness of chemical dispersants used in oil spill response by competing for surfactant molecules and altering oil droplet behavior.

Study Type Environmental

Microplastics (MPs) and spilled oil are both major concerns in the marine environment. In this study, we investigated if and how MPs would interact with crude oil and potentially reduce the effectiveness of oil dispersants applied during oil spill response operations. With the addition of dispersant, MPs and oil (covered by dispersants through their hydrophobic tails) formed MPs-oil-dispersant agglomerates that were found to exist from the surface layer to the bottom of the seawater column. Their resurfacing and sinking led to a decrease in oil dispersion effectiveness. Effects of MP concentration, MP aging, and dispersant-to-oil volumetric ratios (DORs) on oil dispersion were examined. We found that the dispersion effectiveness of light oil and heavy oil decreased 38.26 % and 38.25 %, respectively, with an increased MP concentration. The dispersion effectiveness of light oil and heavy oil was 82.86 ± 10.87 % and 40.39 ± 4.96 % with pristine MPs and increased up to 109.75 ± 0.71 % and 58.30 ± 0.00 % when using MPs aged for 56 days. MPs reduced oil dispersion effectiveness under different DORs. The findings of this first report to understand the interactions among MPs, oil and dispersants have provided fundamental insights that may influence future decision making on the selection and use of oil spill response strategies.

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