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Holographic characterization of contaminants in water: Differentiation of suspended particles in heterogeneous dispersions

Water Research 2017 44 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Laura A. Philips, David B. Ruffner, Fook Chiong Cheong, Jaroslaw M. Blusewicz, Jaroslaw M. Blusewicz, Priya Kasimbeg, Priya Kasimbeg, Basma I. Waisi, Jeffrey R. McCutcheon, David G. Grier

Summary

Researchers used holographic imaging — a technique that measures the size and light-bending properties of individual particles — to simultaneously identify polystyrene microbeads, bacteria, and oil droplets in the same water sample, demonstrating a faster and more informative way to detect and classify multiple types of waterborne contaminants at once.

Determining the size distribution and composition of particles suspended in water can be challenging in heterogeneous multicomponent samples. Light scattering techniques can measure the distribution of particle sizes, but provide no basis for distinguishing different types of particles. Direct imaging techniques can categorize particles by shape, but offer few insights into their composition. Holographic characterization meets this need by directly measuring the size, refractive index, and three-dimensional position of individual particles in a suspension. The ability to measure an individual colloidal particle's refractive index is a unique capability of holographic characterization. Holographic characterization is fast enough, moreover, to build up population distribution data in real time, and to track time variations in the concentrations of different dispersed populations of particles. We demonstrate these capabilities using a model system consisting of polystyrene microbeads co-dispersed with bacteria in an oil-in-water emulsion. We also demonstrate how the holographic fingerprint of different contaminants can contribute to identifying their source.

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