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First-line detection of PET and PVC microplastics in water using a portable fluorescence lifetime platform

Journal of Hazardous Materials Advances 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Siyao Xiao, Siyao Xiao, Siyao Xiao, Siyao Xiao, Cristina Miceli, Cristina Miceli, Luca Digiacomo, Luca Digiacomo, Siyao Xiao, Siyao Xiao, Cristina Marchini, Cristina Marchini, Luca Digiacomo, Siyao Xiao, Siyao Xiao, Cristina Miceli, Luca Digiacomo, Luca Digiacomo, Giulio Caracciolo, Giulio Caracciolo, Giulio Caracciolo, Luca Digiacomo, Giulio Caracciolo, Massimiliano Papi, Luca Digiacomo, Giulio Caracciolo, Alessandro Rossetta, Giulio Caracciolo, Daniela Pozzi Daniela Pozzi Daniela Pozzi Daniela Pozzi Alessandro Rossetta, Cristina Miceli, Giulio Caracciolo, Alessandro Rossetta, Alessandro Rossetta, Cristina Marchini, Cristina Miceli, Cristina Miceli, Daniela Pozzi Cristina Miceli, Cristina Marchini, Cristina Marchini, Massimiliano Papi, Giulio Caracciolo, Cristina Marchini, Daniela Pozzi

Summary

Researchers demonstrated that a portable fluorescence lifetime analysis (FLA) device can rapidly screen for PET and PVC microplastics in water suspensions at concentrations as low as 0.01 mg/mL. The label-free method is much cheaper than conventional detection approaches, enabling cost-effective tiered environmental monitoring.

• A portable FLA device screens micro- and nano- plastics in few minutes. • The label-free detection limit reaches 0.01 mg mL⁻¹ for heterogeneous water suspensions. • The cost of FLA workflow is significantly lower than classical detection methods. • The approach enables tiered monitoring by reserving advanced analyses for positively screened samples. The widespread presence of micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) in aquatic environments raises increasing environmental and health concerns, highlighting the need for fast, portable, and accessible detection methods. While fluorescence lifetime analysis coupled with phasor analysis has shown promise for monodispersed polystyrene (PS) detection, its applicability to other prevalent MNPs remains underexplored. Here, the aqueous suspensions of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) microplastics (0.01–0.05 mg/mL) were examined without labeling or preprocessing. Time-correlated single-photon counting data were transformed into phasor plot to extract their fluorescence lifetime (τ Ф ) and modulation. Both polymers exhibited stable fluorescence lifetimes (2.38±0.12 ns for PET and 2.50±0.21 ns for PVC) across the concentration range tested. Despite the fluorescence lifetimes of PET and PVC overlap with those of other common polymers, such as PS (2.34±0.14 ns), the photon counts and modulation increased approximately linearly with microplastic concentration. In summary, the consistent signal and the relationships among concentration, photon counts, and phasor fingerprints make the portable, label-free FLA system reliable for detecting MNPs in water within minutes, with a limit of detection of 0.01 mg/mL. This system’s capability is particularly valuable for its deployment as a first-line screening tool in remote or resource-limited communities, enabling timely interventions and trigger targeted advanced polymer-specific analysis.

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