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A novel way to rapidly monitor microplastics in soil by hyperspectral imaging technology and chemometrics
Shan, J.; Zhao, J.; Liu, L.; Zhang, Y.; Wang, X.; Wu, F. (2018). A novel way to rapidly monitor microplastics in soil by hyperspectral imaging technology and chemometrics. Environ. Pollut. 238: 121-129. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2018.03.026
In: Environmental Pollution. Elsevier: Barking. ISSN 0269-7491; e-ISSN 1873-6424, meer
Peer reviewed article  

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Trefwoord
    Hyperspectral imaging
Author keywords
    Support vector machine; Soil; Microplastics; Rapid detection

Auteurs  Top 
  • Shan, J.
  • Zhao, J.
  • Liu, L.
  • Zhang, Y.
  • Wang, X.
  • Wu, F.

Abstract
    Hyperspectral imaging technology has been investigated as a possible way to detect microplastics contamination in soil directly and efficiently in this study. Hyperspectral images with wavelength range between 400 and 1000 nm were obtained from soil samples containing different materials including microplastics, fresh leaves, wilted leaves, rocks and dry branches. Supervised classification algorithms such as support vector machine (SVM), mahalanobis distance (MD) and maximum likelihood (ML) algorithms were used to identify microplastics from the other materials in hyperspectral images. To investigate the effect of particle size and color, white polyethylene (PE) and black PE particles extracted from soil with two different particle size ranges (1–5 mm and 0.5–1 mm) were studied in this work. The results showed that SVM was the most applicable method for detecting white PE in soil, with the precision of 84% and 77% for PE particles in size ranges of 1–5 mm and 0.5–1 mm respectively. The precision of black PE detection achieved by SVM were 58% and 76% for particles of 1–5 mm and 0.5–1 mm respectively. Six kinds of household polymers including drink bottle, bottle cap, rubber, packing bag, clothes hanger and plastic clip were used to validate the developed method, and the classification precision of polymers were obtained from 79% to 100% and 86%–99% for microplastics particle 1–5 mm and 0.5–1 mm respectively. The results indicate that hyperspectral imaging technology is a potential technique to determine and visualize the microplastics with particle size from 0.5 to 5 mm on soil surface directly.

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