4.8 Article

Natural Solar Irradiation Produces Fluorescent and Biodegradable Nanoplastics

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 16, Pages 6626-6635

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c07537

Keywords

nanoplastics; natural photoaging; fluorescent tracer; aquatic creatures; biodegradability

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It has been found that nanoplastics, especially PVC NPs, exhibit enhanced fluorescence after exposure to simulated and natural solar irradiation. This fluorescence can serve as an efficient indicator for tracking the migration of nanoparticles in organisms. Moreover, the photoaged NPs undergo easier biodegradation compared to pristine NPs, potentially affecting their fate in food chains.
Nanoplastics (NPs) have raised global concern owing to their potential health effects. Herein, after simulated and natural solar irradiation, polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, and poly(vinyl chloride) nanoplastics (PVC NPs) were observed to exhibit enhanced fluorescence, particularly PVC NPs. Furthermore, the role of photoaged NPs as a potential fluorescence indicator was evaluated by exposing a model aquatic organism Daphnia magna to these NPs. Our results revealed that photoaged NPs exhibited strong fluorescence owing to the generation of conjugated pi bonds, which can achieve pi-pi* electron transition with low energy consumption. Photogenerated fluorescence also enabled the photoaged NPs to act as efficient fluorescent tracers, which can help track NP migration in various organisms. The results of two-photon laser confocal scanning microscopy revealed that the photoaged NPs could translocate across biological barriers and accumulate in extraintestinal tissues in addition to being ingested and excreted. Moreover, compared with pristine NPs, the photoaged NPs underwent biodegradation more easily, probably because of increased hydrophilicity due to photogenerated oxygen-containing moieties. Therefore, in addition to producing fluorescent NPs without the attachment of external fluorescent dyes, the natural photoaging process can promote the migration and degradation of photoaged NPs in food chains.

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