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Papers
20 resultsShowing papers similar to Detection ofMicroplastics Pollution Using a GreenFluorescent Protein-Based Microbial Biosensor Coupled with Raman Spectroscopy
ClearDetection of Microplastics Pollution Using a Green Fluorescent Protein-Based Microbial Biosensor Coupled with Raman Spectroscopy
Researchers developed a biosensor using a green fluorescent protein-producing bacterium that lights up in the presence of microplastics, combined with Raman spectroscopy for confirmation. The system could detect microplastics at concentrations as low as 0.1 milligrams per liter within 24 hours. This biological detection approach offers a potentially faster and less expensive alternative to conventional microplastic analysis methods.
Visualization and characterisation of microplastics in aquatic environment using a home-built micro-Raman spectroscopic set up
Researchers built an affordable micro-Raman spectroscopy system capable of identifying microplastics in water samples, offering a low-cost alternative to expensive commercial equipment. The system could visualize, measure, and chemically identify different types of microplastic particles. This kind of accessible detection technology is important, especially for developing countries, because widespread monitoring of microplastic pollution in water sources is essential for protecting public health.
Microplastic identification using Raman microsocpy
Researchers developed and implemented a Raman spectroscopy system for rapid detection and identification of microplastic particles on substrates. The system enables efficient chemical characterization of microplastics found across diverse environmental matrices including ocean, lakes, soil, beach sediment, and human blood.
Study on Rapid Recognition of Marine Microplastics Based on Raman Spectroscopy
Researchers developed a rapid identification system for marine microplastics using Raman spectroscopy, enabling quick determination of plastic type and size. Fast, accurate identification tools are critical for monitoring the growing problem of microplastic pollution in ocean environments.
Applications of Raman spectroscopy for microplastic detection and characterization: a comprehensive spectral reference
This review evaluates Raman spectroscopy as a tool for detecting and identifying microplastics across water, soil, air, and biological samples. The study consolidates reference spectra for common plastic polymers and discusses recent innovations like surface-enhanced Raman techniques that improve detection sensitivity, while also addressing challenges like fluorescence interference in complex samples.
Identification of microplastics using Raman spectroscopy: Latest developments and future prospects
This review summarizes the latest advances in using Raman spectroscopy to identify microplastics in environmental samples, highlighting improvements in speed, sensitivity, and the ability to characterize plastic type and surface chemistry.
Microfluidics-based electrophoretic capture and Raman analysis of micro/nanoplastics
Researchers developed a microfluidics-based electrophoretic capture system combined with Raman spectroscopy analysis to detect and characterize micro- and nanoplastics from aquatic ecosystems, exploiting differences in polymer composition to improve identification accuracy.
Analyte-sensing Particles and Impact of Plastics on Environmentally Abundant Bacteria
This dissertation describes development of tunable gold nanoparticles for environmental contaminant sensing using Raman spectroscopy and investigates how nano- and microplastics interact with abundant aquatic bacteria. Understanding how plastic particles affect environmental microbes is important for assessing their ecological impacts in water systems.
Raman Spectroscopy and Machine Learning for Microplastics Identification and Classification in Water Environments
Researchers combined Raman spectroscopy with machine learning algorithms for automated identification and classification of microplastics in water environments, achieving high accuracy in distinguishing different polymer types based on spectral fingerprints.
Fluorescent labelling combined with confocal differential Raman spectroscopy to detect microplastics in seawater
Researchers combined fluorescent labeling with confocal differential Raman spectroscopy to develop a rapid method for detecting microplastics in near-shore seawater, achieving efficient removal of organic matter interference through optimized sample pretreatment. The system demonstrated accurate identification of multiple polymer types in complex seawater matrices.
Identification of Microplastics Using a Custom Built Micro-Raman Spectrometer
Researchers built a custom micro-Raman spectrometer and demonstrated its use for identifying microplastic polymer types in environmental samples, achieving sensitive and specific polymer identification at particle sizes down to a few micrometers.
Fluorescence-Guided Raman Spectroscopy with an Integrated Adapter for Faster and Cost-Effective Microplastic Detection
A fluorescence-guided Raman spectroscopy system with integrated adaptive optics was developed to improve detection of microplastics in complex environmental matrices. The instrument advances the sensitivity and speed of microplastic identification, supporting more thorough environmental monitoring.
Rapid MicroplasticDetection Using High-ThroughputScreening Raman Spectroscopy
Researchers developed a high-throughput screening Raman spectroscopy system for rapid microplastic detection, overcoming the traditional tradeoff between spatial resolution, field of view, and analytical throughput to enable faster identification of plastic particles across environmental samples with low concentrations.
Advances in Surface‐Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy for Detection of Aquatic Environmental Pollutants
This review examines surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) as a technique for detecting aquatic pollutants, highlighting its exceptional sensitivity and molecular fingerprinting capability for identifying microplastics and other contaminants at trace concentrations.
Raman spectroscopy: Recent advances in fast and reliable microplastic analysis
This review summarized recent advances in Raman spectroscopy for fast and reliable microplastic identification, covering improvements in speed, sensitivity, and automation that are making the technique more practical for routine environmental monitoring. Raman-based methods are increasingly able to identify microplastics in complex environmental matrices including biological tissues.
Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy for the detection of microplastics
Researchers developed a surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy method using gold nanoparticles to detect polystyrene microplastics at concentrations as low as 6.5 micrograms per milliliter, offering a new tool for detecting sub-micron plastic pollutants in water.
Design of a confocal micro-Raman spectroscopy system and research on microplastics detection
Researchers built a custom confocal micro-Raman spectroscopy system designed to detect microplastics more cost-effectively than commercial instruments. The improved signal quality enables more accurate identification of plastic polymer types in environmental samples.
A review of recent progress in the application of Raman spectroscopy and SERS detection of microplastics and derivatives
This review covers advances in using Raman spectroscopy and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) to detect and identify microplastics in the environment. These techniques offer high resolution and sensitive detection that can identify specific plastic types even at very small sizes. Better detection methods are essential for understanding the true extent of microplastic contamination and its potential risks to human health.
Quantitative analysis of microplastics in water by Raman spectroscopy: influence of microplastic concentration on Raman scattering intensities
Researchers investigated quantitative Raman spectroscopy for detecting microplastics directly in water, finding that Raman scattering intensities varied with concentration for both PVC spheres (40-100 um) and PE spheres (40-48 um) dispersed in de-ionized water at 0.1-1.0 wt%.
Fast microplastics identification with stimulated Raman scattering microscopy
Stimulated Raman scattering microscopy was applied to rapidly identify and image microplastic particles in complex environmental samples at speeds dramatically faster than conventional Raman spectroscopy. The technique has potential to enable high-throughput microplastic analysis that could make large-scale environmental monitoring more feasible.