4.7 Article

Unique metalloid uptake on microplastics: The interaction between boron and microplastics in aquatic environment

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 800, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.149668

Keywords

Microplastics; Boron; Adsorption; Desorption; Aquatic environment

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21878343, 51804276]

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This study investigated the adsorption characteristics of boron by microplastics and revealed the potential environmental risks of metalloid enrichment.
Boron pollution in the aquatic environment has a hazardous effect on human health and the ecosystem as a metalloid pollutant, and few researchers have focused on the potential interaction between boron and microplastics. We investigated the adsorption of boron on four types of microplastics (polyvinyl chloride (PVC), aged PVC, polystyrene (PS), and aged PS). The adsorption behavior was explored by kinetics, isotherm models, and several aqueous factors, including pH, humic acid, ionic strength (Na+), metal ion types (Mg2+, Ca2+, Cu2+, and Al3+), and the seawater environment. The adsorption capacities on microplastics were followed: aged PVC (0.91 mg/g) > aged PS (0.197 mg/g) > virgin PVC (0.1 mg/g) > virgin PS (0.005 mg/g). The adsorption kinetics and isotherm models suggested monolayer adsorption and chemisorption. Humic acid and high pH significantly inhibited the adsorption due to the complexation and hydrolysis of boric acid (B(OH)(3)), respectively. The presence of metal ions may enhance or hinder adsorption, depending on the boron species, ion concentration, ion type, and microplastics categories. The unique interaction mainly depended on surface complexations of B(OH)(3) with oxygen-containing groups on microplastics surface. Because aged microplastics have more oxygen-containing groups, they can combine more B (OH)(3), and PVC can adsorb more boron due to the C-Cl bond and surface diffusion. In the aquatic environment, however, metal ions may occupy these binding sites, and the electrostatic force between borate ([B(OH)(4)](-)) and microplastics will take precedence. In the simulated intestines of warm-blooded animals, we achieved the greatest boron desorption ratio on microplastics. This work explored the adsorption characteristics of boron by microplastics and revealed potential environmental risks of metalloid enrichment. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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