Article 6HZK1 Bottled Water Contains Hundreds of Thousands of Nanoplastic Particle Per Liter

Bottled Water Contains Hundreds of Thousands of Nanoplastic Particle Per Liter

by
janrinok
from SoylentNews on (#6HZK1)

canopic jug writes:

Multiple sites are covering a PNAS article on the prodigious quantities of nanoplastics in bottled water.

Plastics are now omnipresent in our daily lives. The existence of microplastics (1 m to 5 mm in length) and possibly even nanoplastics (<1 m) has recently raised health concerns. In particular, nanoplastics are believed to be more toxic since their smaller size renders them much more amenable, compared to microplastics, to enter the human body.

However, detecting nanoplastics imposes tremendous analytical challenges on both the nano-level sensitivity and the plastic-identifying specificity, leading to a knowledge gap in this mysterious nanoworld surrounding us.

To address these challenges, we developed a hyperspectral stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) imaging platform with an automated plastic identification algorithm that allows micro-nano plastic analysis at the single-particle level with high chemical specificity and throughput. We first validated the sensitivity enhancement of the narrow band of SRS to enable high-speed single nanoplastic detection below 100 nm.

We then devised a data-driven spectral matching algorithm to address spectral identification challenges imposed by sensitive narrow-band hyperspectral imaging and achieve robust determination of common plastic polymers. With the established technique, we studied the micro-nano plastics from bottled water as a model system.

We successfully detected and identified nanoplastics from major plastic types. Micro-nano plastics concentrations were estimated to be about 2.4 1.3 * 105 particles per liter of bottled water, about 90% of which are nanoplastics. This is orders of magnitude more than the microplastic abundance reported previously in bottled water. High-throughput single-particle counting revealed extraordinary particle heterogeneity and nonorthogonality between plastic composition and morphologies; the resulting multidimensional profiling sheds light on the science of nanoplastics.

Also at:
CNN: Bottled water contains thousands of nanoplastics so small they can invade the body's cells, study says
New York Post: Bottled water contains 100 times more plastic particles than previously thought: study
The Hill: Bottled water industry pushes back on new study warning of nanoplastics
Futurism: Bottled Water Industry Says Please Disregard This Horrifying Discovery About Our Product
CBC: When you drink bottled water, you're drinking lots and lots of nanoplastics
Futurism: Scientists Find Bottled Water Filled With Hundreds of Thousands of Microplastics
DW: Surrounded by microplastics: The risks and solutions
Gizmodo: Bottled Water Contains 100 Times More Plastic Particles Than Previously Thought
and many more, pointing back to the PNAS article.

PNAS, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), is a peer reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS).

Original Submission

Read more of this story at SoylentNews.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location https://soylentnews.org/index.rss
Feed Title SoylentNews
Feed Link https://soylentnews.org/
Feed Copyright Copyright 2014, SoylentNews
Reply 0 comments