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Release of hazardous nanoplastic contaminants due to microplastics fragmentation under shear stress forces

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 17:23 authored by Marie Enfrin, Judy Lee, Yann Gibert, Faiza Basheer, Lingxue Kong, Ludovic Dumee
The presence of nanoplastics in water has become a major environmental concern in the last decade however the knowledge on the origin and formation of these emerging contaminants is lacking due to analytical challenges in detection and quantification techniques. The release of nanoplastics due to the fragmentation of microplastics extracted from a facial scrub and the resulting toxicity on aquatic species are reported here for the first time. The daily use of 4 g of facial scrub could release up to 10 microplastics of 400 nm in size per litre of wastewater from household drains. Turbulences created by mixing or pumping induced the fragmentation of microplastics into nanoplastics smaller than 10 nm via a crack propagation and failure mechanism, increasing the number of particles in water by one order of magnitude. Compared to microplastics at a fixed concentration number of 6.8 × 10 part./mL, the generated nanoplastics initiated the death of 54% more cells in zebrafish by passive ingestion via skin diffusion which therefore pose a real threat for aquatic living organisms. These results stress the need to reduce the release of nano/microplastics in the aquatic environment to prevent the contamination of all trophic levels. 11 8

Funding

Development of two-dimensional nanoporous membranes

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Journal of Hazardous Materials

Volume

384

Number

121393

Start page

1

End page

9

Total pages

9

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006107486

Esploro creation date

2021-06-23

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