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Partitioning of hydrophobic organic contaminants between polymer and lipids for two silicones and low density polyethylene

Chemosphere 2017 45 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.
Foppe Smedes, Tatsiana P. Rusina, Henry Beeltje, Henry Beeltje, Philipp Mayer Philipp Mayer Philipp Mayer Henry Beeltje, Henry Beeltje, Philipp Mayer Philipp Mayer Philipp Mayer

Summary

This study measured how hydrophobic organic contaminants partition between plastic polymers and biological lipids, providing data needed to predict whether microplastic ingestion increases a toxin's bioavailability in living organisms. The findings are important for assessing whether microplastics meaningfully boost pollutant transfer from the environment to marine life.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Polymers are increasingly used for passive sampling of neutral hydrophobic organic substances (HOC) in environmental media including water, air, soil, sediment and even biological tissue. The equilibrium concentration of HOC in the polymer can be measured and then converted into equilibrium concentrations in other (defined) media, which however requires appropriate polymer to media partition coefficients. We determined thus polymer-lipid partition coefficients (K) of various PCB, PAH and organochlorine pesticides by equilibration of two silicones and low density polyethylene (LDPE) with fish oil and Triolein at 4 °C and 20 °C. We observed (i) that K was largely independent of lipid type and temperature, (ii) that lipid diffusion rates in the polymers were higher compared to predictions based on their molecular volume, (iii) that silicones showed higher lipid diffusion and lower lipid sorption compared to LDPE and (iv) that absorbed lipid behaved like a co-solute and did not affect the partitioning of HOC at least for the smaller molecular size HOC. The obtained K can convert measured equilibrium concentrations in passive sampling polymers into equilibrium concentrations in lipid, which then can be used (1) for environmental quality monitoring and assessment, (2) for thermodynamic exposure assessment and (3) for assessing the linkage between passive sampling and the traditionally measured lipid-normalized concentrations in biota. LDPE-lipid partition coefficients may also be of use for a thermodynamically sound risk assessment of HOC contained in microplastics.

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