| Literature DB >> 32193409 |
Zahra Sobhani1, Yongjia Lei1,2, Youhong Tang3, Liwei Wu3,4, Xian Zhang5, Ravi Naidu1,6, Mallavarapu Megharaj1,6, Cheng Fang7,8.
Abstract
Millions of tonnes of plastics have been released into the environment. Although the risk of plastics to humans is not yet resolved, microplastics, in the range of 1 μm - 5 mm, have entered our bodies, originating either from ingestion via the food chain or from inhalation of air. Generally there are two sources of microplastics, either directly from industry, such as cosmetic exfoliants, or indirectly from physical, chemical and biological fragmentation of large (>5 mm) plastic residues. We have found that microplastics can be generated by simple tasks in our daily lives such as by scissoring with scissors, tearing with hands, cutting with knives or twisting manually, to open plastics containers/bags/tapes/caps. These processes can generate about 0.46-250 microplastic/cm. This amount is dependent on the conditions such as stiffness, thickness, anisotropy, the density of plastic materials and the size of microplastics.This finding sends an important warning, that we must be careful when opening plastic packaging, if we are concerned about microplastics and care about reducing microplastics contamination.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32193409 PMCID: PMC7082338 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-61146-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Mass change monitored with QCM during scissoring, tearing and cutting processes, attributed to the generation of microplastics. The insets show the scissors used for scissoring and the plastic targets. “Control” means scissoring air (dry run) before scissoring plastics or when doing nothing before or after scissoring/tearing/cutting plastics. The solid lines indicate the shifting direction of the mass change for clarification and (f) compares the different approaches (scissoring, tearing and cutting) for a plastic target.
Figure 2Microplastics confirmed by SEM and Raman spectra. Microplastics particles (a–e) are generated by patting packing foam (PS), (f–j) by scissoring a drinking-water bottle (PET), (k–o) by manually tearing a plastic cup (PP) and (p–t) by knife-cutting a plastic bag (PE). From the left column to the right, they are SEM images (showing the boundaries of cutting) (column 1), photo images (column 2), Raman mapping images (columns 3 and 4), and typical Raman spectra (column 5). The laser scanning areas for Raman mapping are suggested by red dashed squares. The characteristic peaks and the typical Raman spectra for Raman mapping and plastic identification are indicated by filled arrows and dashed lines. For comparison, the typical background curve (corresponding to the dark area in the Raman images) and the standard Raman spectra used to identify the type of plastic are also presented.
Figure 3QCM mass changes, SEM images and FTIR spectra of typical microplastics generated in daily life by tearing open a chocolate bag (top row), cutting a sealing tape with a knife (middle row), and twist-opening a plastic bottle (bottom row). FTIR spectra collected from the mother matrices are shown as “Standard” and photo images of the mother matrices are also shown for comparison.