Vis-NIR spectroscopy based rapid and non-destructive method to quantitate microplastics: An emerging contaminant in farm soil

被引:0
|
作者
Saha, Namita Das [1 ,9 ]
Kumari, Priyanka [1 ]
Das, Bappa [2 ]
Sahoo, R. N. [3 ]
Kumar, Rajesh [4 ]
Golui, Debasis [5 ]
Singh, Bhupinder [1 ]
Jain, Niveta [1 ]
Bhatia, Arti [1 ]
Chaudhary, Anita [1 ]
Chakrabarti, Bidisha [1 ]
Bhowmik, Arpan [6 ]
Saha, Partha [7 ,9 ]
Islam, Sadikul [8 ]
机构
[1] ICAR Indian Agr Res Inst Pusa, Div Environm Sci, New Delhi, India
[2] ICAR Cent Coastal Agr Res Inst, Ela, Goa, India
[3] ICAR Indian Agr Res Inst, Div Agr Phys, New Delhi, India
[4] ICAR Indian Agr Res Inst, Div Agr Chem, New Delhi, India
[5] ICAR Indian Agr Res Inst Pusa, Div Soil Sci & Agr Chem, New Delhi, India
[6] ICAR Indian Agr Stat Res Inst IASRI, New Delhi, India
[7] ICAR Indian Agr Res Inst Pusa, Div Vegetable Sci, New Delhi, India
[8] ICAR Indian Inst Soil & Water Conservat, Dehra Dun, India
[9] ICAR CTRI, RS Dinhata, Cooch Behar, West Bengal, India
关键词
Microplastics; Soil; Rapid method; Quantification; PLSR; PCR; Spectroscopy; Vis-NIR; ENVIRONMENTAL-SAMPLES; IDENTIFICATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172088
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Microplastics (MPs) is the second most important environmental issue and can potentially enter into food chain through farmland contamination and other means. There are no standardized extraction methods for quantification of MPs in soil. The embedded errors and biases generated serious problems regarding the comparability of different studies and leading to erroneous estimation. To address this gap, present study was formulated to develop an efficient method for MPs analysis suitable for a wide range of soil and organic matrices. A method based on Vis-NIR (Visible -Near Infra Red) spectroscopy is developed for four different soil belonging to Alfisol, Inceptisol, Mollisol and Vertisol and two organic matter matrices (FYM and Sludge). The developed method was found as rapid, reproducible, non-destructive and accurate method for estimation of all threedensity groups of MPs (Low, Medium and High) with a prediction accuracy ranging from 1.9 g MPs/kg soil (Vertisol) to 3.7 g MPs/kg soil (Alfisol). Two different regression models [Partial Least Square Regression (PLSR) and Principal Component Regression (PCR)] were assessed and PLSR was found to provide better information in terms of prediction accuracy and minimum quantification limit (MQL). However, PCR performed better for organic matter matrices than PLSR. The method avoids any complicated sample preparation steps except drying and sieving thus saving time and acquisition of reflectance spectrum for single sample is possible within 18 s. Owing to have the minimum quantification limit ranging from 1.9-3.7 g/kg soil, the vis-NIR based method is perfectly suitable for estimation of MPs in soil samples collected from plastic pollution hotspots like landfill sites, regular based sludge amended farm soils. Additionally, the method can be adapted by small scale compost industries for assessing MPs load in product like city compost which are applied at agricultural fields and will be helpful in quantifying possible MPs at the sources itself.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Vis-NIR spectroscopy for non-destructive classification of juicy peach
    Wu, Di
    He, Yong
    IEEE ICMA 2006: PROCEEDING OF THE 2006 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MECHATRONICS AND AUTOMATION, VOLS 1-3, PROCEEDINGS, 2006, : 84 - +
  • [2] Nitrogen Concentration Estimation in Tomato Leaves by VIS-NIR Non-Destructive Spectroscopy
    Ulissi, Valentina
    Antonucci, Francesca
    Benincasa, Paolo
    Farneselli, Michela
    Tosti, Giacomo
    Guiducci, Marcello
    Tei, Francesco
    Costa, Corrado
    Pallottino, Federico
    Pari, Luigi
    Menesatti, Paolo
    SENSORS, 2011, 11 (06) : 6411 - 6424
  • [3] Non-destructive quality monitoring of stored tomatoes using VIS-NIR spectroscopy
    Saad A.
    Jha S.N.
    Jaiswal P.
    Srivastava N.
    Helyes L.
    Saad, Abdelgawad (en_gawad2000@yahoo.com), 1600, Elsevier B.V., Netherlands (09): : 158 - 164
  • [4] Non-destructive determination of impact bruising on table olives using Vis-NIR spectroscopy
    Jimenez-Jimenez, Francisco
    Castro-Garcia, Sergio
    Blanco-Roldan, Gregorio L.
    Agueera-Vega, Juan
    Gil-Ribes, Jesus A.
    BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING, 2012, 113 (04) : 371 - 378
  • [5] Non-Destructive Quality Evaluation of 80 Tomato Varieties Using Vis-NIR Spectroscopy
    Duckena, Lilija
    Alksnis, Reinis
    Erdberga, Ieva
    Alsina, Ina
    Dubova, Laila
    Duma, Mara
    FOODS, 2023, 12 (10)
  • [6] Robust soil mapping at the farm scale with vis-NIR spectroscopy
    Ramirez-Lopez, L.
    Wadoux, A. M. J. -C.
    Franceschini, M. H. D.
    Terra, F. S.
    Marques, K. P. P.
    Sayao, V. M.
    Dematte, J. A. M.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2019, 70 (02) : 378 - 393
  • [7] In Situ VIS-NIR Spectroscopy for a Basic and Rapid Soil Investigation
    Debaene, Guillaume
    Bartminski, Piotr
    Siluch, Marcin
    SENSORS, 2023, 23 (12)
  • [8] An examination of the principle of non-destructive flesh firmness measurement of peach fruit by using VIS-NIR spectroscopy
    Uwadaira, Yasuhiro
    Sekiyama, Yasuyo
    Ikehata, Akifumi
    HELIYON, 2018, 4 (02):
  • [9] Non-Destructive Measurement of Soluble Solids Content and Vitamin C in Gannan Navel Oranges by Vis-NIR Spectroscopy
    Liu, Yande
    Sun, Xudong
    Dong, Xiaoling
    Ouyang, Aiguo
    Gao, Rongjie
    Zhang, Hailiang
    Pan, Yuanyuan
    SENSOR LETTERS, 2011, 9 (03) : 1133 - 1139
  • [10] Non-destructive Estimation of Mandarin Maturity Status Through Portable VIS-NIR Spectrophotometer
    Francesca Antonucci
    Federico Pallottino
    Graziella Paglia
    Amedeo Palma
    Salvatore D’Aquino
    Paolo Menesatti
    Food and Bioprocess Technology, 2011, 4 : 809 - 813