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Marine microplastic: Preparation of relevant test materials for laboratory assessment of ecosystem impacts

Abstract

Studies investigating the effects of plastic litter on marine biota have almost exclusively utilised pristine plastic materials that are homogeneous in polymer type, size, shape and chemical composition. This is particularly the case for microplastics (< 5 mm), where collecting sufficient quantities from the marine environment for use in laboratory impacts studies is simply not feasible. Weathered plastics collected from the marine environment show considerable physical and chemical differences to pristine and post-production consumer plastics. For this study, macroplastic litter was collected on a Dutch beach and cryo-milled to create a microplastic mixture for environmental impact assessments. The sample composition followed proportions of marine plastic litter types observed in an earlier large beach clean-up. Polymer composition of the sample was assessed by infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) and differential scanning calorimetry analysis (DSC). The particle size distribution of the cryo-milled microplastics showed that particles 0.5-2.0 mm represented 68% of mass, but smaller sizes (< 2 mm) strongly dominated numerically. Inductively coupled plasma spectroscopy (ICP-MS and ICP-OES) analysis of the microplastic mixture revealed a broad range of metals and other elements (e.g. Al, Cd, Cr, Fe, Mg, Pb, S and Zn), representing common inorganic additives used as colorants, fillers and stabilisers. GC-MS analysis identified a broad range of organic plasticisers, stabilisers, antioxidants and flame retardants. Comparison of different analytical approaches showed that creation of a homogeneous microplastic mixture is possible, representing a first step in closing the gap between laboratory studies with pristine materials and realistic scenarios with weathered microplastic.
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Category

Academic article

Client

  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 257479

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Susanne Kühn
  • Albert van Oyen
  • Andy Booth
  • André Meijboom
  • Jan van Franeker

Affiliation

  • Netherlands
  • Germany
  • SINTEF Ocean / Climate and Environment

Year

2018

Published in

Chemosphere

ISSN

0045-6535

Publisher

Pergamon Press

Volume

213

Page(s)

103 - 113

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