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Quantification of microplastics in environmental samples via pressurized liquid extraction and pyrolysis-gas chromatography

Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 2019 313 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.
Tim Lauschke, Tim Lauschke, Corinna Földi, Georg Dierkes, Tim Lauschke, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Corinna Földi, Corinna Földi, Georg Dierkes, Corinna Földi, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Tim Lauschke, Tim Lauschke, Georg Dierkes, Corinna Földi, Susanne Becher, Corinna Földi, Susanne Becher, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Tim Lauschke, Thomas A. Ternes Thomas A. Ternes Thomas A. Ternes Corinna Földi, Corinna Földi, Thomas A. Ternes Corinna Földi, Thomas A. Ternes Georg Dierkes, Corinna Földi, Heike Schumacher, Corinna Földi, Heike Schumacher, Corinna Földi, Thomas A. Ternes Corinna Földi, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Thomas A. Ternes Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Thomas A. Ternes Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Corinna Földi, Thomas A. Ternes Tim Lauschke, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Thomas A. Ternes Tim Lauschke, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Thomas A. Ternes Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Georg Dierkes, Heike Schumacher, Georg Dierkes, Thomas A. Ternes

Summary

Researchers combined pressurized liquid extraction with pyrolysis-gas chromatography to quantify microplastics in environmental samples, validating the method against reference materials and real-world samples. The approach offers a quantitative, polymer-specific measurement of bulk microplastic mass in sediments and soils, complementing particle-counting methods.

Study Type Environmental

The quantification of microplastics (MP) in environmental samples is currently a challenging task. To enable low quantification limits, an analytical method has been developed combining pressurized liquid extraction (PLE) and pyrolysis GC-MS. The automated extraction includes a pre-extraction step via methanol followed by a subsequent PLE using tetrahydrofuran. For the most frequently used synthetic polymers polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and polystyrene (PS), limits of quantification were achieved down to 0.007 mg/g. Recoveries above 80% were attained for solid matrices such as soil and sediments. The developed method was applied for MP quantification in environmental samples such as sediment, suspended matter, soil, and sewage sludge. In all these matrices, PE and PP were detected with concentrations ranging from 0.03 to 3.3 mg/g. In sewage sludge samples, all three polymers were present with concentration levels ranging between 0.08 ± 0.02 mg/g (PP) and 3.3 ± 0.3 mg/g (PE). However, especially for solid samples, the analysis of triplicates revealed elevated statistical uncertainties due to the inhomogeneous distribution of MP particles. Thus, care has to be taken when milling and homogenizing the samples due to the formation of agglomerates. Graphical abstract.

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