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Intercomparison study on commonly used methods to determine microplastics in wastewater and sludge samples

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2019 154 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.
Markus Sillanpää, Mirka Lares, Mirka Lares, Mirka Lares, Markus Sillanpää, Mirka Lares, Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Mohamed Chaker Ncibi, Mohamed Chaker Ncibi, Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Markus Sillanpää, Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää Mika Sillanpää

Summary

An intercomparison study of common microplastic analysis methods for wastewater and sludge found substantial variability in results between laboratories, highlighting the urgent need for standardized protocols to enable reliable comparisons.

Study Type Environmental

The harmonized procedures in terms of the sampling, sample treatment and identification of microplastics in different environmental samples are missing, which poses challenges to researchers to compare the results or to adopt 'the most effective' monitoring approach. Furthermore, in the related literature, the used procedures are rarely tested with spiked microplastics to predetermine their recovery rates. Without this knowledge, results should only be discussed as rough estimations of the real environmental concentrations of microplastics. In this study, six different methods previously used in microplastic studies of different media were tested with municipal wastewater and digested sludge samples, spiked with seven different types of plastic particles and fibres. Recovery rates, time consumption, advantages and disadvantages were assessed and most suitable treatment procedures (i.e. high recovery rates in short amount of time) were chosen for both wastewater and sludge. Suitability of staining with Rose Bengal was examined together with most efficient methods, but it did not improve the recovery of microplastics. In addition, the possible impacts of the treatments for identification with micro-Raman and FTIR microscope were assessed. Filtration with size fractioning was found to be the best method for both wastewater and sludge samples, with recovery rates of spiked microplastics around 91.4% and 92.9%, respectively.

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