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Not one-size-fits-all: µ-FTIR and pyrolysis GC-MS for complementary analysis of microplastics in eutrophic surface water.
Summary
Researchers applied a combined stereomicroscopy, micro-FTIR, and pyrolysis GC-MS workflow to surface water samples from Lake Victoria, finding polyethylene and polypropylene as dominant polymers by particle count while pyrolysis GC-MS quantified seven additional polymers — including nylons and PET — largely invisible to FTIR, demonstrating the complementary value of both techniques.
This study reports large microplastics found in Lake Victoria through an analytical workflow that combines the complementary methods stereomicroscopy, micro-Fourier transform infrared (µ-FTIR) spectroscopy and pyrolysis gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Pyr-GC-MS) for the quantification of 11 environmentally relevant microplastic polymers. Algae-rich surface water samples (n = 18) were trawled using a 0.3 mm manta net from Lake Victoria, the world's largest tropical lake. Stereomicroscopy as a determinant analytical technique detected 191 particles, which were primarily blue fragments and fibres. Polyethylene and polypropylene were the dominant polymers identified by µ-FTIR. Pyr-GC-MS allowed the detection and quantification of microplastics (MPs) with LOD and LOQ of 0.01-14.7 µg and 0.03-49.1 µg. Polyethylene (0.058-0.34 µg/L), polypropylene (0.024 µg/L and 0.043 µg/L), nylon 6 (0.0051-0.064 µg/L), nylon 66 (0.0022-0.084 µg/L), poly(ethylene terephthalate) (0.0029-0.027 µg/L) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (0.0036 µg/L) were quantified. µ-FTIR was found to be suitable for the identification of the most abundant polymers in the 0.3-4.9 mm size range whereas Pyr-GC-MS afforded the quantification of seven polymers, most of which were not detected by µ-FTIR. This complementary workflow gave a wider perspective on MP loading, providing both polymer concentrations and physical characteristics (sizes, colours, forms and count) of the MPs.
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