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Surfactant stealth effect of microplastics in traditional coagulation process observed via 3-D fluorescence imaging
Summary
Researchers found that surfactants adsorbed to microplastics can mask the particles' surface charge and hydrophobicity, reducing coagulation efficiency in wastewater treatment and explaining why surfactant-laden microplastics from real wastewater are harder to remove than lab-clean plastic particles.
Microplastics (MPs) have aroused rising social concerns. Although amounts of surfactants exist in wastewater and are expected to alter the surface properties of MPs significantly as they are designed to be adsorbed by hydrophobic particles. However, rare works have been done on the influence of surfactants on the coagulation removal process of MPs which was thought to be an effective way to remove MPs together with other natural particles, such as clay. We used 3-D fluorescence imaging to track the coagulation removal process of polystyrene MPs. Our results indicate that nonionic surfactant, tween 20 in ppm scale, could inhibit the coagulation removal of polystyrene MPs significantly. Residue MPs in the effluent is proportional with the surfactant concentration and increases up to tens of times, which will lead to a dramatic increase in their potential environmental risks. Apparent size effect exists in the coagulation in which smaller MPs can escape from the coagulation removal more easily. Mechanism study suggests that the steric resistance of the hydrophilic flexible polyethylene glycol (PEG) layer formed by tween 20 adsorbed on MP surface inhibits clay deposition and thus hinders subsequent agglomeration and precipitation. A surfactant stealth effect, which is used in the design of nanomedicine to avoid the human immune recognition and clearance of nano-drugs from blood circulation, also exists in the coagulation removal process of MPs. Our finding not only proves the strong influence of surfactants on MPs but also will stimulate related studies on other latent surfactant effects of MPs.
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