Abstract
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) microplastics and nanoplastics are ubiquitously present in the atmosphere as atmospheric and airborne forms (PET-aMPs). Using first-principles calculations, we analyze the uptake of primary air pollutants onto PET-aMPs, focusing on their stabilities, adsorption mechanisms, and thermochemistry. The results show that PET-aMPs are selective for the spontaneous adsorption of CO, CO2, NO, N2O, NO2, NH3, and SO2, reaching stable adsorption energies of 6–20 kcal/mol per molecule, with comparable uptake ability than carbon-based materials, metals/metalloids, and metal oxide surfaces. Then, PET-aMPs become a vector for coexisting air pollutants in the atmosphere, which adsorb by inner or outer adsorption depending on the molecular polarity (dipole moment) and atomic constitution (electronegativity) of gaseous molecules. Also, atmospheric H2O and O2 are not competitive molecules, and ozone could enhance adsorption due to surface oxidation and structure breakdown. The interplay of electrostatic (46–61%) and dispersion forces (21–58%) drives the adsorption mechanism, where low-polar pollutants display almost a balanced electrostatic vs. dispersion contribution, while high polar molecules display a higher electrostatic stabilization. The outer adsorption is reached by strong dispersion, hydrogen bonding, and dipole-dipole-induced pairs, while lone-pair-π interactions appear in the inner adsorption regime. These results expand the understanding of the hazards and risks of atmospheric and airborne microplastics/nanoplastics, their impacts, co-transport ability, and interaction with the environment.
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