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Small-sized microplastics and pigmented particles in bottled mineral water

Water Research 2018 936 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Barbara E. Oßmann, George Sarau, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Barbara E. Oßmann, George Sarau, George Sarau, George Sarau, Heinrich Holtmannspötter, Barbara E. Oßmann, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Heinrich Holtmannspötter, Heinrich Holtmannspötter, Monika Pischetsrieder, Heinrich Holtmannspötter, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen George Sarau, George Sarau, Wilhelm Dicke, Wilhelm Dicke, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Wilhelm Dicke, Wilhelm Dicke, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Barbara E. Oßmann, Barbara E. Oßmann, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen Silke Christiansen

Summary

Researchers tested bottled mineral water and found microplastics and pigmented particles present, suggesting that plastic packaging itself may be a source of contamination in commercially sold water.

Up to now, only a few studies about microparticle contamination of bottled mineral water have been published. The smallest analysed particle size was 5 μm. However, due to toxicological reasons, especially microparticles smaller than 1.5 μm are critically discussed. Therefore, in the present study, 32 samples of bottled mineral water were investigated for contamination by microplastics, pigment and additive particles. Due to the application of aluminium coated polycarbonate membrane filters and micro-Raman spectroscopy, a lowest analysed particle size of 1 μm was achieved. Microplastics were found in water from all bottle types: in single use and reusable bottles made of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) as well as in glass bottles. The amount of microplastics in mineral water varied from 2649 ± 2857 per litre in single use PET bottles up to 6292 ± 10521 per litre in glass bottles. While in plastic bottles, the predominant polymer type was PET; in glass bottles various polymers such as polyethylene or styrene-butadiene-copolymer were found. Hence, besides the packaging itself, other contamination sources have to be considered. Pigment particles were detected in high amounts in reusable, paper labelled bottles (195047 ± 330810 pigment particles per litre in glass and 23594 ± 25518 pigment particles per litre in reusable paper labelled PET bottles). Pigment types found in water samples were the same as used for label printing, indicating the bottle cleaning process as possible contamination route. Furthermore, on average 708 ± 1024 particles per litre of the additive Tris(2,4-di-tert-butylphenyl)phosphite were found in reusable PET bottles. This additive might be leached out from the bottle material itself. Over 90% of the detected microplastics and pigment particles were smaller than 5 μm and thus not covered by previous studies. In summary, this is the first study reporting about microplastics, pigment and additive particles found in bottled mineral water samples with a smallest analysed particle size of 1 μm.

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