Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/handle/10553/139756
Title: Chemometric discrimination of airborne fibres: microplastics, regenerated cellulose and natural fibres
Authors: Edo, Carlos
Schiano, Marica Erminia
Álvarez-Méndez, Sergio J.
Hernández-Borges, Javier
Vega-Moreno, Daura 
Molina Rodríguez, Ana 
Gómez, May 
Herrera, Alicia 
González-Pleiter, Miguel
Fernández-Piñas, Francisca
Rosal, Roberto
UNESCO Clasification: 330801 Control de la contaminación atmosférica
331210 Plásticos
Keywords: Airborne fibres
Cellulose fibres
Microplastics
OPLS-DA
Indoor environment, et al
Issue Date: 2025
Project: Enviroplannet
Journal: Environmental research (New York, N.Y. Print) 
Abstract: Interest in airborne microplastics has surged in the past decade, and a range of complementary tools are now used to characterize the different polymer found in samples. Most surveys, however, focus almost exclusively on synthetic fragments and fibres, overlooking the cellulosic fraction that often dominates particle counts. In this study, we measured the concentration of airborne particles in a range of indoor and outdoor settings and including densely populated areas, industrial zones, insular locations and natural reserve areas. We quantified both number- and mass-based concentrations of microplastics (MPs) and cellulosic fibres (CFs), with the latter outnumbering MPs by at least one order of magnitude. The average plastic-particle load was 0.024 MP/m3 (0.007–0.043 MP/m3), whereas no MPs were detected in the natural reserve. MPs consisted mainly of polyethylene, acrylic and polypropylene, while polyester fibres predominated indoors. Because cellulosic materials can be either natural debris or anthropogenic fibres, we applied an advanced chemometric workflow, discriminant analysis coupled with Hotelling distances on mid-IR spectra, to distinguish cotton/linen textiles and regenerated cellulose (viscose, modal, Tencel) from plants, cutting ambiguous assignments by more than half. Roughly 50 % of all CFs were thus traced to textile sources. These results underline the importance of including CFs in airborne-plastic assessments and demonstrate that robust, yet widely accessible, μ-FTIR chemometric methods can deliver the resolution needed for accurate exposure and risk evaluations.
URI: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/handle/10553/139756
ISSN: 0013-9351
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2025.122082
Source: Environmental research [ISSN 0013-9351], v. 282
Appears in Collections:Artículos
Adobe PDF (4,56 MB)
Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Share



Export metadata



Items in accedaCRIS are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.