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Long-distance atmospheric transport of microplastic fibres influenced by their shapes
Xiao, S.; Cui, Y.; Brahney, J.; Mahowald, N.M.; Li, Q. (2023). Long-distance atmospheric transport of microplastic fibres influenced by their shapes. Nature Geoscience 16(10): 863-870. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41561-023-01264-6
In: Nature Geoscience. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 1752-0894; e-ISSN 1752-0908, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Xiao, S.
  • Cui, Y.
  • Brahney, J.
  • Mahowald, N.M.
  • Li, Q.

Abstract
    Recent studies have highlighted the importance of the atmosphere in the long-range transport of microplastic fibres. However, their dry deposition in the atmosphere is not fully understood, with the common spherical-shape assumption leading to significant uncertainties in predicting their travel distance and atmospheric residence time. Shapes of microplastic fibres vary greatly, which can be as long as 100 μm and as thin as 2 μm. Shapes of microplastic fibres may greatly affect their dry deposition in the atmosphere. Here we develop a theory-based settling velocity model for simulating atmospheric transport of microplastic fibres in different sizes and shapes. The model predicts a smaller aerodynamic size of microplastic fibres than that estimated by using volumetrically equivalent spherical counterparts. We find that the treatment of flat fibres as cylindrical ones, due to uncertainty in dimensions of sampled microplastic fibres, would cause overestimation of their dry deposition rate. Accounting for fibre thickness in sampled microplastic fibres leads to a mean enhancement of residence time by more than 450% compared to cylindrical ones. The results suggest a much more efficient long-range transport of flat fibres than previously thought.

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