Abstract

Filters of various structures (filter by pore depth or pore width) and pore sizes are used to extract microplastics (<5 mm) in researches. In present study, we demonstrate that filters with different structures and pore sizes can lead to different outcomes in microplastic filtering. Our results showed that when filtering large-sized microplastics, nylon filter (double-layer-hole type) retained nearly 100% of fibers, while polycarbonate filter (single-layer-hole type) only retained 61.7%. Polycarbonate filter retained the most fragments (80.8%), while cotton fiber filter (multilayer-hole type) retained the least (54.4%). Pellets were retained on different layers of nylon and cotton fiber filters, and could not be quantified accurately. Additionally, the sizes of some fibers and fragments captured were not within the expected ranges by lattice-knitting filters. Large fiber (3568.0 μm) was not filtered out after 1000 μm pore-size filtration. Small fragment (37.2 μm) was found on 50 μm pore-size filters. To validate laboratory results, filed waters containing microplastics (∼90% in form of fibers) were filtered through different pore-size filters. As expected, the relationship between abundance and pore size followed a same trend as that in laboratory fiber samples. Thereby, our results indicated that filter structure and pore size could affect the abundances of microplastics with different shapes. To obtain more accurate abundance of microplastics in a wide size range, and to consider filtration duration, size limitation of observation, and spatial resolution of identification instrument, we recommend that water samples should be filtered using 20 μm pore-size filters with a double-layer-hole type of structure.

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