0
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. Food & Water Human Health Effects Remediation Sign in to save

Organotin Release from Polyvinyl Chloride Microplastics and Concurrent Photodegradation in Water: Impacts from Salinity, Dissolved Organic Matter, and Light Exposure

Environmental Science & Technology 2019 195 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Ying Yao, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Ling Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Wen Zhang Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Ying Yao, Francisco Artigas, Qinghui Huang, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Francisco Artigas, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Ying Yao, Ying Yao, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Qinghui Huang, Chunzhao Chen, Chunzhao Chen, Francisco Artigas, Francisco Artigas, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Ling Chen, Qinghui Huang, Ling Chen, Wen Zhang Ling Chen, Qinghui Huang, Wen Zhang Qinghui Huang, Wen Zhang Ling Chen, Wen Zhang Wen Zhang Wen Zhang Wen Zhang Qinghui Huang, Wen Zhang

Summary

Researchers studied how organotin compounds leach from polyvinyl chloride microplastics under different light and water conditions. They found that UV and visible light exposure accelerated the release of certain organotin additives while simultaneously degrading others through photochemical reactions. The study demonstrates that environmental factors like salinity and dissolved organic matter significantly influence the rate at which microplastics release potentially harmful chemical additives into water.

Polymers

Photochemical weathering leads to degradation of microplastics and releases chemical additives, polymeric fragments, and/or byproducts. This study evaluated the release kinetics of organotin compounds (OTCs) from three different sized (10-300 μm) polyvinyl chloride (PVC) microplastics under UV- and visible light irradiation. Four OTCs, dimethyltin (DMT), monomethyltin (MMT), dibutyltin (DBT), and monobutyltin (MBT), were found to release from PVC particles after 24 h leaching in darkness ranging from 2 to 20 μg·g-PVC<sup>-1</sup>. Under UV/visible light irradiation, only DMT and DBT were detectable, whereas MMT and MBT were not detected due to rapid photodegradation. The total tin concentrations (including organic and inorganic tins) in the aqueous phase monotonically increased under light exposure. By contrast, they reached plateaus after 24 h in darkness, confirming the photodegradation of OTCs. A release kinetics model was established and correctly interpreted the microplastics size effect on the OTC release process. Finally, the impacts of salinity and dissolved organic matter (DOM) were investigated. The release and photodegradation of OTCs were both inhibited at high salinity conditions, probably due to the enhanced readsorption of OTCs on PVC microplastics and the formation of halogen radicals that were less reactive toward neutral OTCs. The presence of DOM, however, increased OTCs release probably because the excited state triplet DOM (<sup>3</sup>DOM*) formed and reacted with OTCs from PVC microplastics.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper