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Identification of microplastics in the environment

2016 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Erik Dümichen

Summary

This overview paper described the challenge of identifying microplastics in environmental samples, noting that polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, and PET are the most common polymer types found in the environment and that analysis is complicated by the vast number of natural particles present alongside plastic particles. Developing reliable identification methods is foundational to producing trustworthy data on microplastic contamination.

The worldwide produced plastic amount was about 314 m tones in 2013. A content of about 5-12 m tones of plastic products is estimated to attain to the environment. There, they are exposed to environmental aging conditions like UV light, abrasion, water, oxidation etc. and degrade to small particles. If the particles reach a dimension < 5 mm they are called microplastic. Today microplastic is almost ubiquitary and was found in the aquatic as well as in the terrestrial environment. The main representatives are polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS) and polyethylene terephthalat (PET). Analyzing microplastics in environmental samples turned out to be very challenging, due to the fact that there are only a few synthetic particles beside a huge number of natural. Furthermore, the different polymers particles vary in their shape, their density and their chemical characteristics. Until now, there is no standard procedure for sampling, concentration and analyzing. We developed a thermal decomposition method for analyzing micro plastics in environmental samples. The method is a combination of a thermal extraction on solid-phase adsorption agents with a subsequent analysis of the decomposition products by thermal desorption gas chromatography mass spectrometry. In contrast to more established methods, such as IR or Ramen spectroscopy, our method enables measurements within few hours and gives an integration result of polymer specific decomposition products. Therefore, it is possible to identify and to quantify polymers in environmental matrices. The use of the method is demonstrated for various polymers (PE, PP, PS, PET) in spiked and first time also in real environmental samples.

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