Particle dynamics of nanoplastics suspended in water with soil microparticles: insights from small angle neutron scattering (SANS) and ultra-SANS

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Abstract

Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and ultra-SANS (USANS) were employed to understand the aggregation behavior and observe the size reduction for nanoplastics (NPs) formed from a biodegradable mulch film, and microparticles of vermiculite (V), an artificial soil, suspended in water in the presence of low convective shear (ex situ stirring) prior to measurements. Neutron contrast matching was employed to minimize the signal of V (by 100-fold) and thereby isolate the signal due to NPs in the neutron beam, as the contrast match point (CMP) for V (67 vol% deuteration of water) differed from that of NPs by more than 20%. The original NPs' size distribution was bimodal: <200 nm and 500-1200 nm, referred to as small and large NPs, i.e., SNPs and LNPs, respectively. In the absence of V, SNPs formed homoaggregates at higher concentrations that decreased with stirring time, while the size of LNPs remained unchanged. The presence of V at 2-fold lower concentration than NPs did not change the size of SNPs but reduced the size of LNPs by nearly 2-fold as stirring time increased. Because the size of SNPs and LNPs did not differ substantially between CMP and 100% D2O solvents, it is evident that SNPs and LNPs are mainly composed of NPs and not V. The results suggest that LNPs are susceptible to size reduction through collisions with soil microparticles via convection, yielding SNPs near soil-water interfaces within vadose zones.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEnvironmental Science: Nano
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Funding

The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support provided through the USDA (Grant 2020-67019-31167), UTIA SPRINT Program, the Herbert College of Agriculture, the Biosystems Engineering and Soil Department, and the Science Alliance at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, for this research. Measurements on Bio-SANS were supported by the Center for Structural Molecular Biology, funded by the DOE Office of Biological and Environmental Research through Field Work Proposal (FWP) ERKP291. This research used resources at the High Flux Isotope Reactor and Spallation Neutron Source, DOE Office of Science User Facilities operated by the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The beam time was allocated to Bio-SANS on proposal number IPTS-22148.1 and USANS on proposal number IPTS-28744.1. The initial feedstocks for preparing M/NPs of PBAT-based biodegradable mulch film were kindly provided by BioBag Americas, Inc. (Dunevin, FL, USA).

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