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Can the presence of additives result in false positive errors for microplastics in infant feeding bottles? | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies have identified food contact materials, like polypropylene infant feeding bottles, as potential sources of microplastics, with one report suggesting over 16 million particles could be released.
  • In this study, only one of the seven bottles examined released detectable microplastics, which were found to be contaminants rather than particles from the actual bottles.
  • The findings suggest that heat can influence the release of additives from the materials, leading to misleading results in microplastic detection, highlighting the need for careful evaluation when heated polymers are involved.

Article Abstract

In recent years, it has been shown that food contact materials can be a potential source of microplastics (MP). Recently, it was reported that more than 16 million polypropylene (PP) particles L may be released from infant feeding bottles (IFBs) made of PP. In the present study seven different IFBs were investigated by the same method used in the aforementioned publication. In our tests, however, only one IFB showed a level of MP above the limit of detection. More importantly, the MP detected were not of the same material as the bottle and are more likely the result of contamination. In addition, there was a notable difference in released MP particles when the water simulant was filtered for µ-Raman spectroscopy at hot temperature (70°C) instead of filtering it after cooling down to room temperature. Thermal desorption gas chromatography mass spectrometry showed that these differences may be the result of migration and precipitation of additives such as fatty acid esters, often used as release agents in bottle production. These observations, that migrating additives could result in false positive errors for MP, indicate the need for critical consideration when polymers have been subjected to heat.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19440049.2021.1989498DOI Listing

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