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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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Correlative Microscopy and Spectroscopy Workflow for Microplastics

Applied Spectroscopy 2020 36 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, George Sarau, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, George Sarau, George Sarau, George Sarau, George Sarau, Lasse Kling, Barbara E. Oßmann, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, Barbara E. Oßmann, Lasse Kling, Ann-Katrin Unger, Ann-Katrin Unger, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Frank Vogler, Lasse Kling, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Barbara E. Oßmann, Silke Christiansen Barbara E. Oßmann, George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen

Summary

A correlative workflow combining optical zoom microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy was demonstrated for comprehensive analysis of the same microplastic particles, enabling simultaneous morphological and chemical characterization at high resolution. The approach avoids the need for conductive coatings and enables identification of particles as small as 100 nanometers.

Polymers

Microplastics (MPs) have been reported in various environmental compartments and their number is continuously increasing because of degradation into smaller fragments down to nanoplastics. Humans are exposed to these small-sized MPs through food and air with potential health consequences that still need to be determined. This requires, in the first place, efficient and detailed visualization, relocalization, and characterization of the same MPs with complementary analytical methods. Here, we show the first application of a correlative microscopy and spectroscopy workflow to MPs that meets these demands. For this purpose, standard MP particles on aluminum-coated polycarbonate membrane filters were investigated by an optical zoom microscope and a hyphenated scanning electron microscopy (SEM)-Raman system. By merging the obtained data in one software, it is possible to navigate on the entire filters' surface and correlate at identical locations MP morphology at the spatial resolutions of electron (1.6 nm at 1 kV for the used SEM, ∼100 nm minimum MP size in this study) and optical (∼1-10 µm) microscopies with chemical identification by micro-Raman spectroscopy. Moreover, we observed that low-voltage SEM works without a conductive coating of MPs, causes no detectable charging and structural changes, and provides high-resolution surface imaging of single and clustered MP particles, thus enabling subsequent Raman measurements. We believe that further work on the accurate identification and quantification of micro- and nanoplastics in real samples can potentially profit from this workflow.

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