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The fate, impacts and potential risks of photoaging process of the microplastics in the aqueous environment

Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 2025 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 58 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jing Tong, Siying He, Xiaoming Huang, Xin Li, Xiaodong Nie, Zhengyang Li, Jia Chen, Zhongwu Li, Weiping Xiong

Summary

This review examines how ultraviolet light from sunlight causes microplastics in water to age and change their physical and chemical properties, including surface texture, chemical structure, and water-repelling ability. Researchers found that photoaged microplastics become better at carrying other pollutants and may pose greater environmental risks than fresh plastics. The study highlights that aged microplastics can also increase biological toxicity and human exposure risks compared to their original form.

Models

Microplastics are ubiquitous in various environments with a wide distribution. When exposed to the natural environment, microplastics undergo photoaging under ultraviolet irradiation, accompanied by a series of physicochemical property changes such as bond breakage and oxygen addition. It is of great significance to understand the physical and chemical properties of photoaged microplastics and their potential environmental risks, but information is limited and lacking in summary to date. This paper summarizes the properties of photoaged microplastics, the factors influencing their aging, and the increased environmental risks following microplastics exposure to ultraviolet radiation in aquatic environments. Firstly, the apparent changes in photoaging behavior on microplastics' physical and chemical properties were outlined, including morphological characteristics, chemical structure, crystallinity, hydrophobicity, Zeta potential and leaching behavior. Then, the factors affecting the photoaging process were discussed comprehensively, including microplastic properties, environmental media, dissolved organic matter (DOM), clay minerals and inorganic anions. In addition, the environmental risks of photoaged microplastics as pollutant transport vectors and disruption of elemental cycles were analyzed. Notably, photoaged microplastics may enhance the induction of biological toxicity and human exposure risks. Finally, knowing the summarized above, some issues that deserve more attention for future research are forecasted. Since the UV-induced weathering of microplastics is a widespread phenomenon with implications for humans, society and the environment, this review could offer valuable insights for future research directions and environmental risk assessments of microplastics.

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