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Papers
20 resultsShowing papers similar to Nanoparticle Heteroagglomeration with Natural and Synthetic Suspended Particulate Matter
ClearStrategies for determining heteroaggregation attachment efficiencies of engineered nanoparticles in aquatic environments
Researchers developed strategies for determining heteroaggregation attachment efficiencies of engineered nanoparticles with suspended particulate matter in aquatic environments, providing a practical roadmap for understanding nanoparticle fate in natural water systems.
Microplastics and Nanoplastics in Aquatic Environments: Aggregation, Deposition, and Enhanced Contaminant Transport
This review examined the aggregation, deposition, and transport of microplastics and nanoplastics in aquatic environments, synthesizing how particle properties and water chemistry govern their fate and mobility in rivers, lakes, and oceans.
Heteroaggregation of nanoplastic particles in the presence of inorganic colloids and natural organic matter
Nanoplastics were found to heteroaggregate extensively with inorganic colloids and natural organic matter in both freshwater and marine conditions, altering their size, surface charge, and settling behavior compared to pristine particles. The study demonstrates that nanoplastic behavior in natural waters is dominated by interactions with other environmental constituents rather than the intrinsic properties of the plastic alone.
Composite materials based on heteroaggregated particles: Fundamentals and applications
This review examines the fundamentals and applications of composite materials formed through heteroaggregation — the aggregation of particles differing in size, charge, shape, or composition. Researchers discuss how heteroaggregation of microplastics with natural particles affects their environmental transport, fate, and toxicity in aquatic systems.
Statistical Thermodynamic Description of Heteroaggregation between Anthropogenic Particulate Matter and Natural Particles in Aquatic Environments
Researchers developed a thermodynamic model to describe how nanoparticles and microplastics aggregate with each other and with natural particles in aquatic environments. Understanding aggregation processes is critical for predicting how microplastics move through water systems and where they ultimately settle.
Sediment organic carbon dominates the heteroaggregation of suspended sediment and nanoplastics in natural and surfactant-polluted aquatic environments
Researchers found that sediment organic carbon plays a dominant role in the heteroaggregation of nanoplastics with suspended sediment particles, with surfactant pollution altering aggregation dynamics and influencing the environmental transport and fate of nanoplastics in aquatic systems.
Interaction, Adhesion and Aggregation of Microplastic/Nanoplastic Particles: Effects of Plastic Polymer Type
This review examines how polymer type, particle size, shape, pH, ionic strength, and salt composition influence the interaction, adhesion, and aggregation behavior of microplastics and nanoplastics in aquatic and soil environments. The paper synthesizes findings on homoaggregation and heteroaggregation with natural and engineered nanoparticles, highlighting how aggregation affects particle transport and environmental fate.
Agglomeration of nano- and microplastic particles in seawater by autochthonous and de novo-produced sources of exopolymeric substances
Nano- and microplastic particles in seawater were found to readily form agglomerates with naturally produced exopolymeric substances, altering their surface properties, size, and sinking behavior compared to pristine particles. The study demonstrates that natural organic matter in seawater fundamentally changes how plastic particles behave and interact with marine organisms and sediments.
Hybrid modeling of hetero-agglomeration processes: a framework for model selection and arrangement
Researchers developed a hybrid modeling framework for hetero-agglomeration processes — the clumping together of different particle types — to better predict how microplastics interact with natural particles in aquatic environments. The framework helps select appropriate models for different environmental conditions and particle combinations.
Aggregation Behavior of Particulate Plastics and Its Implications
This chapter reviews how microplastics aggregate with each other and with natural particles like sediment and algae in water, affecting their transport, fate, and biological availability. Heteroaggregation with natural colloids is more common than microplastic-to-microplastic clumping, which has important implications for how microplastics move through aquatic environments.
Nanoplastics Aggregation in Environment: Analytical Methods and Environmental Implications
This review examines how nanoplastics aggregate in the environment—clumping together or attaching to other particles—and how this affects their analysis and ecological impact. Aggregation changes how nanoplastics move through water and accumulate in organisms, complicating risk assessment for these extremely small plastic particles.
Heteroaggregation kinetics of nanoplastics and soot nanoparticles in aquatic environments
Researchers examined how polystyrene nanoplastics and soot particles aggregate together in aquatic environments, finding that particle ratio, salinity, pH, and dissolved organic matter all influence clumping rates — with calcium ions dramatically accelerating aggregation and potentially altering nanoplastic transport in coastal and marine waters.
Effect of the Surface Hydrophobicity–Morphology–Functionality of Nanoplastics on Their Homoaggregation in Seawater
Researchers found that nanoplastic surface hydrophobicity, morphology, and functional chemistry strongly govern homoaggregation behavior in aquatic environments, with more hydrophobic and functionalized particles forming larger, faster-settling aggregates that alter their environmental fate and bioavailability.
How do microplastics interact with other particles in aquatic environments?
This study investigates how microplastics interact with other particles in aquatic environments, examining the physical and chemical mechanisms governing aggregation, adsorption, and co-transport of microplastics with suspended particles. The research is hosted on the Experiment platform for open scientific discovery funding and sharing.
Heteroaggregation kinetics of oppositely charged nanoplastics in aquatic environments: Effects of particle ratio, solution chemistry, and interaction sequence
Researchers investigated how oppositely charged nanoplastics clump together (heteroaggregation) in water under varying pH, salt, and natural organic matter conditions, finding that electrostatic attraction drives aggregation but humic acid retards it more than sodium alginate, while the sequence and timing of chemical interactions also significantly alters the final aggregation behavior.
A versatile test system to determine nanomaterial heteroagglomeration attachment efficiency
Researchers developed a standardized test system to measure how readily nanoparticles — including nanoplastics — clump together with other environmental particles, which determines how fast they settle out of water. This attachment efficiency data is critical for modeling nanoplastic fate and risk in aquatic environments.
The impact of riverine particles on the vertical velocities of large microplastics
This study examined how suspended sediment particles in rivers interact with larger microplastics (1-5 mm) and affect their sinking velocities, finding that heteroaggregation with riverine particles significantly alters microplastic vertical transport behavior.
Effects of temperature and particle concentration on aggregation of nanoplastics in freshwater and seawater
The aggregation behavior of nanoplastics in freshwater and seawater was studied at different temperatures and particle concentrations, finding that salinity, particle concentration, and temperature all significantly influenced aggregation rates with implications for nanoplastic fate in aquatic environments.
Nanoplastics display strong stability in aqueous environments: Insights from aggregation behaviour and theoretical calculations
Nanoplastics released into aquatic environments were found to be highly stable and resist aggregation and settling under many conditions, meaning they can persist and disperse widely rather than quickly sinking. This environmental stability makes nanoplastics particularly concerning as long-lived and mobile contaminants in water systems.
Recent Advances in the Aggregation Behavior of Nanoplastics in Aquatic Systems
This review examines recent advances in understanding nanoplastic aggregation behavior in aquatic systems, focusing on how polymer surface modification and the use of novel surfactants can be designed to promote aggregation of nanoplastics from the environment. The review distinguishes this approach from conventional surfactant use aimed at dispersing insoluble compounds.