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. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Microplastics' emissions: Microfibers’ detachment from textile garments

Environmental Pollution 2019 261 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.
Francisco Belzagui, Francisco Belzagui, Francisco Belzagui, Francisco Belzagui, Francisco Belzagui, Francisco Belzagui, Francisco Belzagui, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Martín Crespi, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Antonio Ugidos Álvarez, Antonio Ugidos Álvarez, Carmen Gutiérrez‐Bouzán, Mercedes Vilaseca Mercedes Vilaseca Mercedes Vilaseca Mercedes Vilaseca

Summary

Researchers measured microfiber detachment rates from finished textile garments during normal laundering and found that garments shed between 175 and 560 microfibers per gram of fabric, or 30,000 to 465,000 microfibers per square meter. They found a strong correlation between microfiber release and the textile's surface density. The study also provides standardized reporting units to improve comparability across research, an important step given the current lack of methodological consensus in textile microfiber studies.

Microplastics (synthetic polymers <5 mm) have been recently recognized as a big environmental concern, as their ubiquity is an undeniable fact. Their wide variety regarding shapes, sizes, and materials turn them into an intrinsically risky pollutant capable of causing several environmental impacts. Textile microfibers (MF) are a microplastic sub-group. These are mostly shed when a normal laundry of any garment takes place. Special attention has been put onto them, as high concentrations have been found in products for human consumption as shellfish and tap water. However, as there is no consensus on the methodologies to quantify and report the results of MFs detached from textile garments, the degree of similarity between published studies is very low. Hence, the aim of this research was to evaluate the microfibers' detachment rates of finished garments and to provide a set of comparable units to report the results. These were found to range between 175 and 560 MF/g or 30000-465000 MF/m of garment. In addition, there was a high correlation between the MF detachment and the textile article superficial density. Finally, our results were compared with a recent paper that estimated the annual mass flow of MFs to the oceans. This previous publication is 30 times higher when related to the mass but 40 times lower if related to the number of MFs.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper