4.3 Article

Airborne Microplastic in the Atmospheric Deposition and How to Identify and Quantify the Threat: Semi-Quantitative Approach Based on Krakow Case Study

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191912252

Keywords

airborne microplastics; urban pollution; microplastic pollution monitoring

Funding

  1. Polish Ministry of Higher Education and Science [DI2017 021647]

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Airborne microplastic is an emerging and widespread pollutant that is still not well understood. This study aimed to further characterize and develop methods for analyzing airborne microplastic. The methods used allowed for the identification and analysis of different types of synthetic polymers in the atmospheric fallout. Observations were made on the interactions between microplastic particles and the environment, as well as surface changes due to degradation.
Airborne microplastic is an emerging and widespread pollutant yet is still under-characterised and insufficiently understood. Detailed description of microplastic air pollution is crucial as it has been identified in human lungs and remote locations, highlighting the atmosphere as a medium of MP dispersion and transportation. The lack of standardization of methods for measuring and further monitoring of microplastic pollution is an obstacle towards assessment of health risks. Since the first recognition of MP presence in the atmosphere of Krakow in 2019, this research was conducted to further characterise and develop the methods for qualitative and quantitative analysis of airborne microplastic (attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR); pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS); scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy SEM-EDS) and pre-treatment of samples. The data were gathered in seven cycles from June 2019 to February 2020. The methods used in the study allowed the identification and analysis of the changing ratio of the different types of synthetic polymers identified in the atmospheric fallout (low-density polyethylene, nylon-66, polyethylene, polyethylene terephthalate, polypropylene and polyurethane). Observations of interactions between microplastic particles and the environment were conducted with analyses of surface changes due to degradation. Different phases attached to the microplastics surfaces, with some of the inorganic contaminants transported on these surfaces determined also to be of anthropogenic origin. The methodology proposed in this study allows further characterisation of microplastic from multiple locations to provide highly comparable data, leading to identification of the sources of this phenomenon, as well as seasonal changes.

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