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Enhanced adsorption of oxytetracycline to weathered microplastic polystyrene: Kinetics, isotherms and influencing factors

Environmental Pollution 2018 664 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Haibo Zhang, Jiaqing Wang, Bianying Zhou, Yang Zhou, Zhenfei Dai, Qian Zhou, Peter Chriestie, Yongming Luo

Summary

Researchers compared how weathered and new polystyrene foam particles absorb the antibiotic oxytetracycline from water. They found that beached foam that had been exposed to environmental conditions absorbed roughly twice as much of the drug as virgin material, due to increased surface area and chemical changes from weathering. The study suggests that aged microplastics in the environment are more effective at picking up and transporting pharmaceutical contaminants.

Polymers

Microplastic polystyrene foam has been found widely in the environment and is readily transported by wind or water. Beached and virgin foams of size 0.45-1 mm were prepared as sorbents to study oxytetracycline sorption. Enhanced adsorption were found in the beached foams compared to the virgin foams, corresponding to the higher specific surface area, micropore area and the degree of oxidation of the former. The Freundlich K value was 894 ± 84 ((mg kg) (mg L)) for oxytetracycline adsorption on the beached foams, approximately twice as high as on the virgin foams. Effects of solution pH on adsorption to the beached foams were more pronounced to the virgin foams. Maximum adsorption occurred at pH 5 at which electrostatic repulsion between the microplastic surface and the oxytetracycline zwitterion was minimal, indicating that electrostatic interaction may have regulated adsorption. Moreover, H-bonding and multivalent cationic bridging mechanisms may also have affected the adsorption of oxytetracycline to the beached foams as reflected by the ionic effects. Adsorption was promoted more in the presence of humic acid than of fulvic acid, perhaps owing to π-π conjugation between the humic acid and the microplastic surface which led to enhanced electrostatic attraction for oxytetracycline. This study suggests that weathered polystyrene foams may act as carriers of antibiotics in the environment and their potential risks to ecosystem and human health merit further investigation.

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