Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Environment & Energy
Showing Original Post only (View all)Tracking Airborne Microplastics Using Natural (and Coal Enhanced) Radioactive Isotopes [View all]
The paper I'll discuss briefly in this post is this one: Tracing the Transport and Residence Times of Atmospheric Microplastics Using Natural Radionuclides Kunliang Jiang, Jingmin Zhu, Kaijun Su, Xilong Wang, Guoliang Li, Mingyue Deng, and Chaowen Zhang Environmental Science & Technology 2024 58 (35), 15702-15710.
I'll cut to the chase with some excerpts:
Research on microplastics (plastic particles less than 5000 μm in size) initially focused on the marine environment (1) and has since expanded to include terrestrial ecosystems. (2−6) Accumulating evidence indicates that microplastics in the atmosphere can travel above ocean surfaces and even to distant locales via global atmospheric transport. (7,8) However, key questions remain to be answered regarding the vertical exchange and horizontal transport processes of atmospheric microplastics.
Atmospheric microplastics can be deposited on the ground through dry and wet atmospheric fallout, substantially contributing to the presence of microplastics in water and soil environments. (9) Atmospheric transport is emphasized as a crucial pathway impacting the sourcesink dynamics of plastic pollution across different ecosystems. (10) Additionally, owing to their ability to adsorb chemicals, bacteria, and viruses, microplastics are recognized as a novel element within the realm of air pollution. (11−14)
Radon-222 (222Rn, half-life = 3.82 days), a noble gas and decay product in the 238U series, is released from the soil matrix at a constant rate, with >99% of 222Rn in the atmosphere emanating from continental sources. (15) As the long-lived daughters of 222Rn (Supporting Figure 1), (16,17) 210Pb, 210Bi, and 210Po are rapidly adsorbed onto solid particles upon formation, with their fates aligning with those of aerosol-bound particles. The 210Po/210Pb ratio enables the estimation of the residence time of aerosols (RTA), based on two assumptions: (1) the measured atmospheric particulate matter (PM) is treated as a single entity, and (2) all particle-reactive radionuclides produced by 222Rn decay are scavenged from the atmosphere before reaching a new area. Beryllium-7 (7Be, half-life = 53.3 days), a cosmogenic radionuclide, originates from the spallation of oxygen and nitrogen nuclei induced by cosmic rays in the stratosphere and upper troposphere. (18,19) The majority of sup]7Be production (67%) occurs in the stratosphere, and it typically does not reach the troposphere except during thinning of tropopause folds near the jet stream at midlatitudes in the spring. (15,20) Due to their distinctly different source terms but well-established source distributions, 7Be and 210Pb are widely employed as powerful atmospheric tracers for studying the origins and transport processes of air masses. (15,21)
As PM contains microplastics, active particulate samplers are considered appropriate tools for collecting atmospheric microplastics. (22) Aerosol samples are typically collected by filtering a large volume of air via specialized aerosol collection equipment, (15) enabling simultaneous analysis of filtered microplastic particles and trapped natural radionuclides on the filters. However, plastic and nonplastic particles are intermixed during the atmospheric filtration process, rendering separation of their adsorbed radionuclides impossible. Chen et al. (23) reported that the transport dynamics of plastic particles are generally similar to those of nonplastic particles. Thus, the fates of aerosols are closely linked to those of plastic particles.
Herein, we utilized aerosol tracers (7Be, 210Pb, and 210Po) to trace the origins and transport processes of atmospheric microplastics for the first time in Tianjin, a coastal city in China. The aims of the study were to (i) document the temporal variations in and features of atmospheric microplastics; (ii) examine the origins, transport processes, and residence times of microplastics; and (iii) explore the correlations between microplastics and other components of the atmosphere...
Atmospheric microplastics can be deposited on the ground through dry and wet atmospheric fallout, substantially contributing to the presence of microplastics in water and soil environments. (9) Atmospheric transport is emphasized as a crucial pathway impacting the sourcesink dynamics of plastic pollution across different ecosystems. (10) Additionally, owing to their ability to adsorb chemicals, bacteria, and viruses, microplastics are recognized as a novel element within the realm of air pollution. (11−14)
Radon-222 (222Rn, half-life = 3.82 days), a noble gas and decay product in the 238U series, is released from the soil matrix at a constant rate, with >99% of 222Rn in the atmosphere emanating from continental sources. (15) As the long-lived daughters of 222Rn (Supporting Figure 1), (16,17) 210Pb, 210Bi, and 210Po are rapidly adsorbed onto solid particles upon formation, with their fates aligning with those of aerosol-bound particles. The 210Po/210Pb ratio enables the estimation of the residence time of aerosols (RTA), based on two assumptions: (1) the measured atmospheric particulate matter (PM) is treated as a single entity, and (2) all particle-reactive radionuclides produced by 222Rn decay are scavenged from the atmosphere before reaching a new area. Beryllium-7 (7Be, half-life = 53.3 days), a cosmogenic radionuclide, originates from the spallation of oxygen and nitrogen nuclei induced by cosmic rays in the stratosphere and upper troposphere. (18,19) The majority of sup]7Be production (67%) occurs in the stratosphere, and it typically does not reach the troposphere except during thinning of tropopause folds near the jet stream at midlatitudes in the spring. (15,20) Due to their distinctly different source terms but well-established source distributions, 7Be and 210Pb are widely employed as powerful atmospheric tracers for studying the origins and transport processes of air masses. (15,21)
As PM contains microplastics, active particulate samplers are considered appropriate tools for collecting atmospheric microplastics. (22) Aerosol samples are typically collected by filtering a large volume of air via specialized aerosol collection equipment, (15) enabling simultaneous analysis of filtered microplastic particles and trapped natural radionuclides on the filters. However, plastic and nonplastic particles are intermixed during the atmospheric filtration process, rendering separation of their adsorbed radionuclides impossible. Chen et al. (23) reported that the transport dynamics of plastic particles are generally similar to those of nonplastic particles. Thus, the fates of aerosols are closely linked to those of plastic particles.
Herein, we utilized aerosol tracers (7Be, 210Pb, and 210Po) to trace the origins and transport processes of atmospheric microplastics for the first time in Tianjin, a coastal city in China. The aims of the study were to (i) document the temporal variations in and features of atmospheric microplastics; (ii) examine the origins, transport processes, and residence times of microplastics; and (iii) explore the correlations between microplastics and other components of the atmosphere...
Some graphics:
The cartoon introducing the paper:
![](https://i.postimg.cc/FHP3Y220/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0007.jpg)
Others:
![](https://i.postimg.cc/rpKWxfk3/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0001.jpg)
The caption:
Figure 1. Study area and sampling device employed in this investigation.
![](https://i.postimg.cc/R0sdz3S5/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0002.jpg)
The caption:
Figure 2. Temporal fluctuations in the abundance of atmospheric microplastics in Tianjin from March 2022 to February 2023.
![](https://i.postimg.cc/N0SX4RGM/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0003.jpg)
The caption:
Figure 3. Variations in shape, color, and size of atmospheric microplastics across four seasons. (ad) Shapes of microplastics during four seasons; (eh) colors of microplastics during four seasons; (il) sizes of microplastics during four seasons.
![](https://i.postimg.cc/xCBPcWN6/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0004.jpg)
The caption:
Figure 4. Polymer composition and surface morphology of microplastics. (a) Spectra of common polymer fiber types; (b, e) polymer composition and surface morphology of microplastic fibers; (c, f) polymer composition and surface morphology of microplastic fragments; (d, g) polymer composition and surface morphology of microplastic films. PA, polyester amide; PAL, polyacrylate; PBd, polybutadiene; PE, polyethylene; PEPP, poly(ethylene-co-propylene); PET, poly(ethylene terephthalate); PMA, poly(N-methyl acrylamide); PP, polypropylene; PS, polystyrene; PS-MA, poly(styrene-co-maleic acid); PVA, poly(vinyl alcohol); RA, rayon.
![](https://i.postimg.cc/LXJT4H5q/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0005.jpg)
The caption:
Figure 5. 7Be, 210Pb, and 210Po concentrations and ratios in aerosols throughout the year. (a) Concentrations and ratios of 7Be and 210Pb throughout the year; (b) concentrations and ratios of 210Pb and 210Po throughout the year; (c) residence times of aerosol particles throughout the year.
![](https://i.postimg.cc/Y0gzgb1M/EST2024v58i35p15702t15710f0006.jpg)
The caption:
Figure 6. Correlations among atmospheric microplastics, radionuclides, and meteorological parameters (n = 18). MPs, atmospheric microplastics; RT, residence time; PM2.5, fine particulate matter; PM10, inhalable particulate matter; PM, total particulate matter; AQI, air quality index; TEMP, temperature; RH, relative humidity; ATM, atmospheric pressure; AWS, average wind speed; MWS, maximum wind speed; AWD, average wind direction; MWD, maximum wind direction.
I've noted here and elsewhere that people like to carry on about radionuclides released from, say, Fukushima, even though there is very little, if any, evidence that these releases have actually killed anyone, but the same people are disinterested in how many people are killed by air pollution generated by coal combustion, which in a typical decade will result in tens of millions of deaths. I wonder if we could get these people to give a shit if they understood that coal ash is (gasp! freakout! gasp!) radioactive, since it contains uranium and all of its radioactive daughters.
This paper notes that coal combustion complicates their work:
Furthermore, Ouyang et al. (41) observed that coal combustion caused an enrichment of 210Po in fly ash particles, which could lead to elevated 210Po levels in the urban atmosphere when mixed with aerosols in air and long-distance transport. Tianjin begins its urban centralized heating in November. Therefore, we hypothesize that the peak residence time of urban atmospheric particles in November may be correlated with increased 210Po levels from coal consumption.
Anyway...
From the conclusion to the paper:
...This study was limited by the range of detectable microplastic particle size, which varied from 20 μm to 5 mm. Additionally, radionuclides were found to leach from all particle sizes. Challenges remain in developing methods to effectively separate microplastic particles from total suspended particulates during active particulate sampling. An important achievement of this study is the development of a method utilizing natural radionuclides 7Be, 210Pb, and 210Po to explore the transport processes and residence times of atmospheric microplastics...
Have a nice day tomorrow.
5 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
![](du4img/smicon-reply-new.gif)
Tracking Airborne Microplastics Using Natural (and Coal Enhanced) Radioactive Isotopes [View all]
NNadir
Sep 2024
OP
I've lived a long life, long enough. The implications are worse for those who will follow.
NNadir
Sep 2024
#2