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Environmental Fate Modeling of Nanoplastics in a Salinity Gradient Using a Lab-on-a-Chip: Where Does the Nanoscale Fraction of Plastic Debris Accumulate?
GRASSL, Bruno
Institut des sciences analytiques et de physico-chimie pour l'environnement et les materiaux [IPREM]
Institut des sciences analytiques et de physico-chimie pour l'environnement et les materiaux [IPREM]
EL HADRI, Hind
Institut des sciences analytiques et de physico-chimie pour l'environnement et les materiaux [IPREM]
< Leer menos
Institut des sciences analytiques et de physico-chimie pour l'environnement et les materiaux [IPREM]
Idioma
EN
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
Environmental Science and Technology. 2021-03-02, vol. 55, n° 5, p. 3001-3008
Resumen en inglés
The aim of this study is to demonstrate how the flow and diffusion of nanoplastics through a salinity gradient (SG), as observed in mangrove swamps (MSPs), influence their aggregation pathways. These two parameters have ...Leer más >
The aim of this study is to demonstrate how the flow and diffusion of nanoplastics through a salinity gradient (SG), as observed in mangrove swamps (MSPs), influence their aggregation pathways. These two parameters have never yet been used to evaluate the fate and behavior of colloids in the environment, since they cannot be incorporated into classical experimental setups. Land-sea continuums, such as estuaries and MSP systems, are known to be environmentally reactive interfaces that influence the colloidal distribution of pollutants. Using a microfluidic approach to reproduce the SG and its dynamics, the results show that nanoplastics arriving in a MSP are fractionated. First, a substantial fraction rapidly aggregates to reach the microscale, principally governed by an orthokinetic aggregation process and diffusiophoresis drift. These large nanoplastic aggregates eventually float near the water's surface or settle into the sediment at the bottom of the MSP, depending on their density. The second, smaller fraction remains stable and is transported toward the saline environment. This distribution results from the combined action of the spatial salt concentration gradient and orthokinetic aggregation, which is largely underestimated in the literature. Due to nanoplastics' reactive behavior, the present work demonstrates that mangrove and estuarine systems need to be better examined regarding plastic pollution.< Leer menos
Palabras clave en inglés
Nanoplastics
aggregation
salinity
microfluidics
environmental
Proyecto ANR
Nanoparticules de plastiques dans l'environnement: source, impact et prédiction - ANR-17-CE34-0008
Centros de investigación