0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Remediation Sign in to save

Strong Sorption of PCBs to Nanoplastics, Microplastics, Carbon Nanotubes, and Fullerenes

Environmental Science & Technology 2014 911 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.
Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Ilona Velzeboer, Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Christiaan Kwadijk, Christiaan Kwadijk, Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Christiaan Kwadijk, Christiaan Kwadijk, Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Christiaan Kwadijk, Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Christiaan Kwadijk, Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans Albert A. Koelmans

Summary

Researchers measured PCB sorption to nanoplastics, microplastics, carbon nanotubes, and fullerenes, finding that nanoplastics sorbed PCBs strongly — with sorption coefficients comparable to carbon nanotubes — suggesting nanoplastics may be effective vectors for hydrophobic chemical contaminants.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

The presence of microplastic and carbon-based nanoparticles in the environment may have implications for the fate and effects of traditional hydrophobic chemicals. Here we present parameters for the sorption of 17 CB congeners to 10-180 μm sized polyethylene (micro-PE), 70 nm polystyrene (nano-PS), multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT), fullerene (C60), and a natural sediment in the environmentally relevant 10(-5)-10(-1) μg L(-1) concentration range. Effects of salinity and sediment organic matter fouling were assessed by measuring the isotherms in fresh- and seawater, with and without sediment present. Sorption to the "bulk" sorbents sediment organic matter (OM) and micro-PE occurred through linear hydrophobic partitioning with OM and micro-PE having similar sorption affinity. Sorption to MWCNT and nano-PS was nonlinear. PCB sorption to MWCNT and C60 was 3-4 orders of magnitude stronger than to OM and micro-PE. Sorption to nano-PS was 1-2 orders of magnitude stronger than to micro-PE, which was attributed to the higher aromaticity and surface-volume ratio of nano-PS. Organic matter effects varied among sorbents, with the largest OM fouling effect observed for the high surface sorbents MWCNT and nano-PS. Salinity decreased sorption for sediment and MWCNT but increased sorption for the polymers nano-PS and micro-PE. The exceptionally strong sorption of (planar) PCBs to C60, MWCNT, and nano-PS may imply increased hazards upon membrane transfer of these particles.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper