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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. Nanoplastics Sign in to save

3D printer waste, a new source of nanoplastic pollutants

Environmental Pollution 2020 70 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Rafael Vázquez-Duhalt, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Angelica Chiodoni, Rafael Vázquez-Duhalt, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Sergio Bocchini, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Rafael Vázquez-Duhalt, Rafael Vázquez-Duhalt, Rafael Vázquez-Duhalt, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Rafael Vázquez-Duhalt, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández

Summary

This study identified 3D resin printers as a previously overlooked source of nanoplastic pollution, showing that the alcohol-based cleaning process generates plastic nanodebris that contaminates wastewater.

Study Type Environmental

Plastics pollution has been recognized as a serious environmental problem. Nevertheless, new plastic uses, and applications are still increasing. Among these new applications, three-dimensional resin printers have increased their use and popularity around the world showing a vertiginous annual-sales growth. However, this technology is also the origin of residues generation from the alcohol cleaning procedure at the end of each printing. This alcohol/resin mixture can originate unintentionally very small plastic particles that usually are not correctly disposed, and as consequence, could be easily released to the environment. In this work, the nanoparticle generation from 3D printer's cleaning procedure and their physicochemical characterization is reported. Nano-sized plastic particles are easily formed when the resin residues are dissolved in alcohol and placed under UV radiation from sunlight. These nanoparticles can agglomerate in seawater showing an average hydrodynamic diameter around 1 μm, whereas the same nanoparticles remain dispersed in ultrapure water, showing a hydrodynamic diameter of ≈300 nm. The formed nanoparticles showed an isoelectric point close to pH 2, which can facilitate their interaction with other positively charged pollutants. Thus, these unexpected plastic nanoparticles can become an environmental issue and public health risk.

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