Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Adsorption and release behavior of chemicals fr...

Electronic data

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Adsorption and release behavior of chemicals from microplastics during environmental aging

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

Standard

Adsorption and release behavior of chemicals from microplastics during environmental aging. / Chen, Xiaoxin; Halsall, Crispin.
Lancaster University, 2024. 273 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Chen X, Halsall C. Adsorption and release behavior of chemicals from microplastics during environmental aging. Lancaster University, 2024. 273 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2488

Author

Bibtex

@phdthesis{8169bcc5fcda4744b8f5f0ee4e4f413a,
title = "Adsorption and release behavior of chemicals from microplastics during environmental aging",
abstract = "Plastics are widely used in daily life due to their flexibility, durability and low cost. Due to their global usage, and poor handling at all stages of use from manufacture to disposal, an increasing quantity of microplastic debris has been detected in aquatic environments. As microplastics are composed of a wide range of chemical additives (e.g., plasticizers, flame retardants, fillers, etc.), with those chemicals are not tightly bound into the polymer, they can be released into the environment, and furthermore, due to the hydrophobicity of microplastics, contaminants present environment might be adsorbed by microplastics. Microplastics have been shown to undergo extensive agingafter physical abrasion, UV irradiation, biodegradation, etc. The aging effect is an important process that determines the transport and transformation of microplastics in the environment, as well as their interactions with environmental contaminants. This study investigates the aging mechanism, factors affect the aging process, and evaluates how aging of microplastics (including UV irradiation, biofilms colonization, natural aging) affects their surface properties, adsorption/desorption performance, presence ofadditives, etc. Generally, the oxygen-containing groups on the surface of microplastics increase after aging, and sometimes the surface brightness and colour-difference are changed (e.g., yellowing). Together with the changes in surface roughness, all of them directly or indirectly affect the adsorption/desorption performance of bisphenols (typical endocrine-disrupting chemicals) on microplastics. The interaction mechanisms involved H-bonding, π-π interaction, hydrophobicity interaction, electrostatic interaction. In addition, suspect screening analysis suggested that additives (e.g.,antioxidants, light stabilizers, plasticizers) might be vital in controlling the agingprocess, and the aging of microplastics affects the present of additives, leading to the changes of leaching behavior of additives from microplastics to the aquatic environment. This study combined both laboratory and field work, providing direct evidence of microplastic particles aging processes and their potential environmental risks due as a transport vector and exposure medium.",
author = "Xiaoxin Chen and Crispin Halsall",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2488",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Adsorption and release behavior of chemicals from microplastics during environmental aging

AU - Chen, Xiaoxin

AU - Halsall, Crispin

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Plastics are widely used in daily life due to their flexibility, durability and low cost. Due to their global usage, and poor handling at all stages of use from manufacture to disposal, an increasing quantity of microplastic debris has been detected in aquatic environments. As microplastics are composed of a wide range of chemical additives (e.g., plasticizers, flame retardants, fillers, etc.), with those chemicals are not tightly bound into the polymer, they can be released into the environment, and furthermore, due to the hydrophobicity of microplastics, contaminants present environment might be adsorbed by microplastics. Microplastics have been shown to undergo extensive agingafter physical abrasion, UV irradiation, biodegradation, etc. The aging effect is an important process that determines the transport and transformation of microplastics in the environment, as well as their interactions with environmental contaminants. This study investigates the aging mechanism, factors affect the aging process, and evaluates how aging of microplastics (including UV irradiation, biofilms colonization, natural aging) affects their surface properties, adsorption/desorption performance, presence ofadditives, etc. Generally, the oxygen-containing groups on the surface of microplastics increase after aging, and sometimes the surface brightness and colour-difference are changed (e.g., yellowing). Together with the changes in surface roughness, all of them directly or indirectly affect the adsorption/desorption performance of bisphenols (typical endocrine-disrupting chemicals) on microplastics. The interaction mechanisms involved H-bonding, π-π interaction, hydrophobicity interaction, electrostatic interaction. In addition, suspect screening analysis suggested that additives (e.g.,antioxidants, light stabilizers, plasticizers) might be vital in controlling the agingprocess, and the aging of microplastics affects the present of additives, leading to the changes of leaching behavior of additives from microplastics to the aquatic environment. This study combined both laboratory and field work, providing direct evidence of microplastic particles aging processes and their potential environmental risks due as a transport vector and exposure medium.

AB - Plastics are widely used in daily life due to their flexibility, durability and low cost. Due to their global usage, and poor handling at all stages of use from manufacture to disposal, an increasing quantity of microplastic debris has been detected in aquatic environments. As microplastics are composed of a wide range of chemical additives (e.g., plasticizers, flame retardants, fillers, etc.), with those chemicals are not tightly bound into the polymer, they can be released into the environment, and furthermore, due to the hydrophobicity of microplastics, contaminants present environment might be adsorbed by microplastics. Microplastics have been shown to undergo extensive agingafter physical abrasion, UV irradiation, biodegradation, etc. The aging effect is an important process that determines the transport and transformation of microplastics in the environment, as well as their interactions with environmental contaminants. This study investigates the aging mechanism, factors affect the aging process, and evaluates how aging of microplastics (including UV irradiation, biofilms colonization, natural aging) affects their surface properties, adsorption/desorption performance, presence ofadditives, etc. Generally, the oxygen-containing groups on the surface of microplastics increase after aging, and sometimes the surface brightness and colour-difference are changed (e.g., yellowing). Together with the changes in surface roughness, all of them directly or indirectly affect the adsorption/desorption performance of bisphenols (typical endocrine-disrupting chemicals) on microplastics. The interaction mechanisms involved H-bonding, π-π interaction, hydrophobicity interaction, electrostatic interaction. In addition, suspect screening analysis suggested that additives (e.g.,antioxidants, light stabilizers, plasticizers) might be vital in controlling the agingprocess, and the aging of microplastics affects the present of additives, leading to the changes of leaching behavior of additives from microplastics to the aquatic environment. This study combined both laboratory and field work, providing direct evidence of microplastic particles aging processes and their potential environmental risks due as a transport vector and exposure medium.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2488

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2488

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -