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Marine & Wildlife
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Photochemical dissolution of buoyant microplastics to dissolved organic carbon: Rates and microbial impacts
Journal of Hazardous Materials2019
359 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 50
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Aron Stubbins,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Aron Stubbins,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Thais B. Bittar,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li
Aron Stubbins,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Aron Stubbins,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Aron Stubbins,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Lixin Zhu,
Shiye Zhao,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Aron Stubbins,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Aron Stubbins,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Shiye Zhao,
Daoji Li,
Lixin Zhu,
Lixin Zhu,
Aron Stubbins,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li,
Daoji Li
Daoji Li
Summary
Common ocean surface microplastics (PE, PP, EPS) were irradiated under simulated sunlight, which fragmented and oxidized the polymers and produced dissolved organic carbon as a significant byproduct. The study identifies sunlight-driven photochemical dissolution as an important but poorly quantified removal mechanism for buoyant microplastics from the ocean surface.
Trillions of plastic fragments are afloat at sea, yet they represent only 1-2% of the plastics entering the ocean annually. The fate of the missing plastic and its impact on marine life remains largely unknown. To address these unknowns, we irradiated post-consumer microplastics (polyethylene, PE; polypropylene, PP; and expanded polystyrene, EPS), standard PE, and plastic-fragments collected from the surface waters of the North Pacific Gyre under a solar simulator. We report that simulated sunlight can remove plastics from the sea surface. Simulated sunlight also fragmented, oxidized, and altered the color of the irradiated polymers. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is identified as a major byproduct of sunlight-driven plastic photodegradation. Rates of removal depended upon polymer chemistry with EPS degrading more rapidly than PP, and PE being the most photo-resistant polymer studied. The DOC released as most plastics photodegraded was readily utilized by marine bacteria. However, one sample of PE microplastics released organics or co-leachates that inhibited microbial growth. Thus, although sunlight may remove plastics from the ocean's surface, leachates formed during plastic photodegradation may have mixed impacts on ocean microbes and the food webs they support.