4.7 Article

Integrated LIBS-Raman spectroscopy: A comprehensive approach to monitor microplastics and heavy metal contamination in water resources

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 231, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2023.116198

Keywords

LIBS; Raman; Microplastics; Heavy metals; Environment

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The increased use of plastic products and global industrial conditions have led to pollution of natural resources, especially water, with microplastics and heavy metals. Continuous monitoring of water samples is urgently needed, but current methods require complicated and separate sampling approaches. This article proposes a system that uses multi-modal LIBS-Raman spectroscopy to detect microplastics and heavy metals in water, with a unified sampling and pre-processing approach. The system can accurately detect trace elements from microplastic surfaces, such as heavy metals and other elements. It has been compared to conventional techniques and showed better results in detecting microplastic-based trace elements.
The increased use of plastic products and global industrial conditions have contaminated natural resources, especially water, with pollutants such as microplastics and trace elements, including heavy metals. Hence, continuous monitoring of water samples is an urgent requirement. However, the existing microplastic-heavy metal monitoring methodologies require discrete and sophisticated sampling approaches. The article proposes a multi-modal LIBS-Raman spectroscopy system for detecting microplastics and heavy metals from water resources with unified sampling and pre-processing approaches. The accomplishment of the detection process is using a single instrument by exploiting the trace element affinity of microplastics, which operates in an integrated methodology to monitor water samples for microplastic-heavy metal contamination. The polypropylene (PP), polyethylene (PE), and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic types dominate the identified microplastics from different sampling spots: in an estuary formed by the Swarna River near Kalmadi (Malpe) in Udupi district, and from River Netravathi in Mangalore, Dakshina Kannada District, Karnataka, India. The detected trace elements from microplastic surfaces include heavy metals such as Al, Zn, Cu, Ni, Mn, and Cr and other elements counting Na, Mg, Ca, and Li. The system could record concentrations of trace elements down to 10 ppm, and comparing results with the conventional technique of Inductively Coupled Plasma-Optical Emission Spectroscopy (ICP-OES) confirms the ability of the system to detect trace elements from microplastic surfaces. In addition, comparing results with direct LIBS analysis of water from the sampling site shows better results in microplasticbased trace element detection.

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