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  4. Characterizing nanoplastic suspensions of increasing complexity: inter-laboratory comparison of size measurements using dynamic light scattering
 
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2025
Journal Article
Title

Characterizing nanoplastic suspensions of increasing complexity: inter-laboratory comparison of size measurements using dynamic light scattering

Abstract
Understanding the potential human health risks associated with micro- and nanoplastic exposure is currently a priority research area. Nanoplastic toxicity studies are complicated by the lack of available, well-characterized test and reference materials. Further, many nanoplastic test materials are inherently more polydisperse and heterogenous in shape compared to polystyrene beads, making accurate and representative size distribution measurements particularly challenging. The aim of this study was to conduct an inter-laboratory comparison of dynamic light scattering measurements, the most commonly used particle sizing method for nanomaterials. Using a published standard operating procedure, size measurements in water and a standardized cell culture medium (CCM) were generated for spherical, carboxy-functionalized polystyrene nanoparticles (PS-COOH; 50 nm; benchmark material), and for increasingly complex in-house produced spherical poly(ethylene terephthalate) (nanoPET) and irregular-shaped polypropylene (nanoPP) test materials. The weighted mean of hydrodynamic diameters of PS-COOH dispersed in water (55 ± 5 nm) showed moderate variation between labs (coefficient of variation, CV = 8.2%) and were similar to literature reports. Measurements of nanoPET (82 ± 6 nm) and nanoPP (182 ± 12 nm) in water exhibited similar CV values (nanoPET: 7.3% and nanoPP; 6.8%). Dispersion of PS-COOH and nanoPET in CCM increased the CV to 15.1 and 14.2%, respectively, which is lower than literature reports (CV = 30%). We conclude with a series of practical recommendations for robust size measurements of nanoplastics in both water and complex media highlighting that strict adherence to a standard operating procedure is required to prevent particle agglomeration in CCM.
Author(s)
Altmann, Korinna
Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung -BAM-, Berlin  
Portela, Raquel
Instituto de Catálisis y Petroleoquímica
Barbero, Francesco
University of Turino
Breuninger, Esther
University of Vienna, Austria  
Camassa, Laura Maria Azzurra
National Institute of Occupational Health  
Velickovic, Tanja Cirkovic
University of Belgrade  
Charitidis, Costas
National Technical University of Athens  
Costa, Anna
National Research Council  
Fadda, Marta
Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica
Fengler, Petra
Federal Institute For Materials Research and Testing
Fenoglio, Ivana
University of Turin
Giovannozzi, Andrea M.
Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica
Haugen, Øyvind Pernell
National Institute of Occupational Health  
Kainourgios, Panagiotis
National Technical University of Athens  
Kammer, Frank von der
University of Vienna, Austria  
Kirchner, Markus J.
University of Bayreuth
Lomax-Vogt, Madeleine
University of Vienna, Austria  
Lujic, Tamara
University of Belgrade  
Milczewski, Frank
Federal Institute For Materials Research and Testing
Moussawi, Mhamad Aly
KU Leuven  
Ortelli, Simona
National Research Council  
Parac-Vogt, Tatjana N.
KU Leuven  
Potthoff, Annegret  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Keramische Technologien und Systeme IKTS  
Reinosa, Julian J. Jimenez
Institute of Ceramics and Glass
Röschter, Sophie
Fraunhofer-Institut für Keramische Technologien und Systeme IKTS  
Sacco, Alessio
Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica
Wimmer, Lukas
University of Vienna, Austria  
Zanoni, Ilaria
National Research Council  
Dailey, Lea Ann
University of Vienna, Austria  
Journal
Environmental science. Nano  
Project(s)
Understanding human exposure and health hazard of micro- and nanoplastic contaminants in our environment  
Plastics fate and effects in the human body  
An Innovative Analytical Platform to Investigate the Effect and Toxicity of Micro and Nano Plastics Combined with Environmental Contaminants on the Risk of Allergic Disease in Preclinical and Clinical  
Funder
European Commission  
European Commission  
European Commission  
Open Access
File(s)
Download (2.21 MB)
Rights
CC BY-NC 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial
DOI
10.1039/d5en00645g
10.24406/publica-7008
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Keramische Technologien und Systeme IKTS  
Keyword(s)
  • Nanoplastics

  • Dynamic light scattering

  • Size measurements

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