Microplastics: A major source of phthalate esters in aquatic environments

Yaru Cao, Huiju Lin, Kai Zhang*, Shaopeng Xu, Meng Yan, Kenneth M.Y. Leung, Paul K.S. Lam

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

151 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Phthalate esters (PAEs) are predominant additives in plastics, their widespread contamination in aquatic environments has raised global concern. Here, twelve plastic products were prepared as microplastics to investigate their release behaviors of PAEs. Six out of 15 PAEs were quantified after 14 days of incubation in water. The leaching potentials were plastic type-specific, where the pencil case (polyvinyl chloride, PVC) represented the highest migrations with total ∑15 PAEs concentration of 6660 ± 513 ng/g, followed by the cleaning brush-1 (polyamide, PA, ~1830 ng/g) and rubber glove (1390 ± 57.5 ng/g). Conversely, the straw (polypropylene, PP), cleaning brush-2 (polyethylene terephthalate, PET) and shampoo bottle (PET) released the lowest amounts of PAEs, with 50.3 ± 8.21, 93.9 ± 91.8 and 104.35 ng/g, respectively. The release patterns of PAE congeners were polymer type-related, where di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) dominated the leaching from PA, PP and PET microplastics (47–84%), diethyl phthalate leached the most from PVC and rubber microplastics (45–92%), while diisobutyl phthalate and DBP dominated the leaching from PE microplastics (68–94%). Water chemical properties could affect PAEs migration and the kinetic leaching process was well fitted with the pseudo-first-order model. Approximately 57.8–16,100 kg/year of PAEs were estimated to be released into oceans from microplastics.
Original languageEnglish
Article number128731
JournalJournal of Hazardous Materials
Volume432
Online published17 Mar 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2022

Research Keywords

  • Kinetic process
  • Leaching, Additives, Scanning electron microscopy
  • Microplastics

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