Tolulope Lawal, Timothy Jugovic, Griffin Josephs, Paul M. Zimmerman, Brian J. Love
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Experimental efforts supplemented by modeling gauged whether common additives found in soaps and laundry detergents interfered with polyacrylate adhesive-based capture of microplastics. On the experimental front, poly(2-ethylhexyl acrylate) (PEHA) samples were evaluated using gravimetric analysis, probe tack, and functional assessments of adhesive-coated glass slides immersed into DI water solutions containing both microparticles and additives (solvents, softeners, and non-ionic surfactants). Nylon-6 spheres and polyethylene terephthalate microplastics were chosen for adsorption using a count-based method by ImageJ imaging analysis. Molecular dynamics computations simulated 2-ethyl-hexylacrylate (2-EHA) adhesive and microplastic interactions in the presence of water, citrate, glycerol and tergitol detergent additives. The experimental work showed that fewer microplastics were collected when tergitol was added and was in line with lower experimental Work of Adhesion (WoAaq) results for nylon and PETE (94.5% and 54.5% reductions respectively). Computational results also confirmed lower adhesion in the presence of tergitol. The experiments also showed that the adhesive swelled while equilibrating in additive solutions. Models suggested that tergitol most negatively impacted particle binding through a competitive “blocking” of the adhesive substrate while the other additives were less conclusive about potential interferences based on competitive binding.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Pollution is an international peer-reviewed journal that publishes high-quality research papers and review articles covering all aspects of environmental pollution and its impacts on ecosystems and human health.
Subject areas include, but are not limited to:
• Sources and occurrences of pollutants that are clearly defined and measured in environmental compartments, food and food-related items, and human bodies;
• Interlinks between contaminant exposure and biological, ecological, and human health effects, including those of climate change;
• Contaminants of emerging concerns (including but not limited to antibiotic resistant microorganisms or genes, microplastics/nanoplastics, electronic wastes, light, and noise) and/or their biological, ecological, or human health effects;
• Laboratory and field studies on the remediation/mitigation of environmental pollution via new techniques and with clear links to biological, ecological, or human health effects;
• Modeling of pollution processes, patterns, or trends that is of clear environmental and/or human health interest;
• New techniques that measure and examine environmental occurrences, transport, behavior, and effects of pollutants within the environment or the laboratory, provided that they can be clearly used to address problems within regional or global environmental compartments.