Size fractionation of high-density polyethylene breakdown nanoplastics reveals different toxic response in Daphnia magna

Ekvall, Mikael T; Gimskog, Isabella; Hua, Jing; Kelpsiene, Egle, et al. (2022-02-24). Size fractionation of high-density polyethylene breakdown nanoplastics reveals different toxic response in Daphnia magna. Scientific Reports, 12,, 3109 - 3109
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DOI:
| Published | English
Authors:
Ekvall, Mikael T ; Gimskog, Isabella ; Hua, Jing ; Kelpsiene, Egle , et al.
Department:
CAnMove - Centre for Animal Movement Research
Aquatic Ecology
NanoLund: Centre for Nanoscience
Biochemistry and Structural Biology
NanoLund: Nanoscience and nanotechnology
Research Group:
CAnMove - Centre for Animal Movement Research
Aquatic Ecology
Abstract:

Plastic litter is a growing environmental problem. Recently, microplastics and nanoplastics, produced during breakdown processes in nature, have been in focus. Although there is a growing knowledge concerning microplastic, little is still known about the effect of nanoplastics. We have showed that mechanical breakdown of high-density polyethylene (HDPE), followed by filtration through 0.8 µm filters, produces material toxic to the freshwater zooplankton Daphnia magna and affected the reproduction in life-time tests. However, further size fractionation and purification reveals that the nanoplastics fraction is non-toxic at these concentrations, whereas the fraction with smaller sizes, below ~ 3 nm, is toxic. The HDPE nanoplastics are highly oxidized and with an average diameter of 110 nm. We conclude that mechanical breakdown of HDPE may cause environmental problems, but that the fraction of leached additives and short chain HDPE are more problematic than HDPE nanoplastics.

Keywords:
Earth and Related Environmental Sciences ; Biomaterials Science ; Polymer Technologies
ISSN:
2045-2322
LUP-ID:
ca6991db-cb99-4b23-900e-9b6a10d58c7b | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/ca6991db-cb99-4b23-900e-9b6a10d58c7b | Statistics

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