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Tire wear particles in the aquatic environment - A review on generation, analysis, occurrence, fate and effects

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages 83-100

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2018.03.051

Keywords

Benzothiazoles; Cities; Elastomers; Leaching; Markers; Removal

Funding

  1. German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) through the project Microplastic in the water cycle - sampling, sample handling, analysis, occurrence, removal and assessment (Mikroplastik im Wasserkreislauf - Probenahme, Probenbehandlung, Analytik, Vo [BMBF 02WRS1378H]

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Tire wear particles (TWP), generated from tire material during use on roads have gained increasing attention as part of organic particulate contaminants, such as microplastic, in aquatic environments. The available information on properties and generation of TWP, analytical techniques to determine TWP, emissions, occurrence and behavior and ecotoxicological effects of TWP are reviewed with a focus on surface water as a potential receptor. TWP emissions are traffic related and contribute 5-30% to non exhaust emissions from traffic. The mass of TWP generated is estimated at 1,327,000 t/a for the European Union, 1,120,000 t/a for the United States and 133,000 tea for Germany. For Germany, this is equivalent to four times the amount of pesticides used. The mass of TWP ultimately entering the aquatic environment strongly depends on the extent of collection and treatment of road runoff, which is highly variable. For the German highways it is estimated that up to 11,000 t/a of TWP reach surface waters. Data on TWP concentrations in the environment, including surface waters are fragmentary, which is also due to the lack of suitable analytical methods for their determination. Information on TWP properties such as density and size distribution are missing; this hampers assessing the fate of TWP in the aquatic environment. Effects in the aquatic environment may stem from TWP itself or from compounds released from TWP. It is concluded that reliable knowledge on transport mechanism to surface waters, concentrations in surface waters and sediments, effects of aging, environmental half-lives of TWP as well as effects on aquatic organisms are missing. These aspects need to be addressed to allow for the assessment of risk of TWP in an aquatic environment. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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