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Description
Plastics, when released into the environment, undergo surface weathering due to mechanical abrasion and ultraviolet (UV) exposure that leads to the formation of microplastics. Weathering also introduces oxygen functional groups on the surface, which will affect surface interactions compared to pristine plastics. In this study, the adsorption of selected model

Plastics, when released into the environment, undergo surface weathering due to mechanical abrasion and ultraviolet (UV) exposure that leads to the formation of microplastics. Weathering also introduces oxygen functional groups on the surface, which will affect surface interactions compared to pristine plastics. In this study, the adsorption of selected model contaminants of high environmental relevance was evaluated at different level of abiotic and biotic transformation to understand how microplastics aging influences contaminant adsorption on high density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PPE). Microplastics were aged through an accelerated weathering process using UV exposure with or without hydrogen peroxide. The effect of UV aging on the microplastics’ morphology and surface chemistry was characterized by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy, streaming Zeta potential, Brunauer–Emmett–Teller Krypton adsorption analyses and Computed X-Ray Tomography. Sorption of organic contaminants was found to be higher on aged microplastics compared to pristine ones for all contaminants investigated. This increase in sorption affinity was found to be associated with a change in the surface chemistry and not in an increase in specific surface area after aging. Biological surface weathering (i.e., biofilm formation) was carried out at a lab-scale setting using model biofilm-forming bacteria followed by adsorption affinity measurement of biofilm-laden microplastics with the model organic contaminants. The amount of microbial biomass accumulated on the surface was also evaluated to correlate the changes in sorption affinity with the change in microplastic biofilm formation. The results of this study emphasize the need to understand how contaminant-microplastics interactions will evolve as microplastics are altered by biotic and abiotic factors in the environment.
ContributorsBhagat, Kartik (Author) / Perreault, Francois (Thesis advisor) / Westerhoff, Paul (Committee member) / Oswald, Jay (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022