Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red

Microplastics (MPs) are small pieces of plastic debris typically defined as smaller than 5mm. Given that the global environment faces a growing plastic pollution crisis, an urgent need exists for rapid, low-cost microplastic detection systems to characterize the health and environmental risk posed b...

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Main Author: Prasad, Suparnamaaya
Other Authors: Triantafyllou, Michael
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2024
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/155849
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author Prasad, Suparnamaaya
author2 Triantafyllou, Michael
author_facet Triantafyllou, Michael
Prasad, Suparnamaaya
author_sort Prasad, Suparnamaaya
collection MIT
description Microplastics (MPs) are small pieces of plastic debris typically defined as smaller than 5mm. Given that the global environment faces a growing plastic pollution crisis, an urgent need exists for rapid, low-cost microplastic detection systems to characterize the health and environmental risk posed by MPs. Fluorescent tagging of microplastics using Nile Red (NR) has recently emerged as an accessible and popular detection method. However, robust, standardized methods of using Nile Red to identify between plastic and organic materials or distinguish between polymers are still being developed. This thesis pursued different optical microplastic detection methods using NR-based fluorescent staining with the ultimate goal of providing data that could be used towards building a polymer identification model that could be implemented into a low-cost detection system. Three different investigations are presented. First, the fluorescence emission spectra of various plastic and organic samples stained with Nile Red is presented. The motivation behind this study was to identify the strongest fluorescence emission peaks for NR-stained plastics under a series of different excitation wavelengths. The spectral results provide a preliminary basis to distinguish Nile Red-stained plastics based on their fluorescent emission spectra alone. Second, this thesis presents a low-cost imaging set-up for fluorescent samples. The system applies the same excitation wavelengths and optical filters used to collect the spectral data. The images are then combined with the spectral data to illustrate another basis for rapidly distinguishing between different plastic polymers. Finally, an optical method for detecting microplastics in liquid samples using photodiodes is explored and discussed. Overall, this thesis contributes to the development of accessible microplastic detection technologies by leveraging the fluorescent properties of NR-stained plastics. The findings highlight the challenges and potential solutions for distinguishing between plastics and organic materials and distinguishing between different plastic polymers.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1558492024-08-02T03:12:53Z Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red Prasad, Suparnamaaya Triantafyllou, Michael Bennett, Andrew Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering Microplastics (MPs) are small pieces of plastic debris typically defined as smaller than 5mm. Given that the global environment faces a growing plastic pollution crisis, an urgent need exists for rapid, low-cost microplastic detection systems to characterize the health and environmental risk posed by MPs. Fluorescent tagging of microplastics using Nile Red (NR) has recently emerged as an accessible and popular detection method. However, robust, standardized methods of using Nile Red to identify between plastic and organic materials or distinguish between polymers are still being developed. This thesis pursued different optical microplastic detection methods using NR-based fluorescent staining with the ultimate goal of providing data that could be used towards building a polymer identification model that could be implemented into a low-cost detection system. Three different investigations are presented. First, the fluorescence emission spectra of various plastic and organic samples stained with Nile Red is presented. The motivation behind this study was to identify the strongest fluorescence emission peaks for NR-stained plastics under a series of different excitation wavelengths. The spectral results provide a preliminary basis to distinguish Nile Red-stained plastics based on their fluorescent emission spectra alone. Second, this thesis presents a low-cost imaging set-up for fluorescent samples. The system applies the same excitation wavelengths and optical filters used to collect the spectral data. The images are then combined with the spectral data to illustrate another basis for rapidly distinguishing between different plastic polymers. Finally, an optical method for detecting microplastics in liquid samples using photodiodes is explored and discussed. Overall, this thesis contributes to the development of accessible microplastic detection technologies by leveraging the fluorescent properties of NR-stained plastics. The findings highlight the challenges and potential solutions for distinguishing between plastics and organic materials and distinguishing between different plastic polymers. S.M. 2024-08-01T19:01:00Z 2024-08-01T19:01:00Z 2024-05 2024-06-13T16:48:54.492Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/155849 Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) Copyright retained by author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Prasad, Suparnamaaya
Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red
title Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red
title_full Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red
title_fullStr Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red
title_full_unstemmed Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red
title_short Investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through Nile Red
title_sort investigating optical microplastic detection methods using fluorescent staining through nile red
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/155849
work_keys_str_mv AT prasadsuparnamaaya investigatingopticalmicroplasticdetectionmethodsusingfluorescentstainingthroughnilered