The presence of microplastics in the forage and feedstuffs of domestic animals represents an imminent threat to the entire food chain that may reach humans since the particles could be transferred into the intestinal barriers and contaminate blood and animal products. Until now, there is no simple, rapid, sustainable, and reliable method to detect microplastics in animal feed. The objective of this study was to investigate the ability of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to detect microplastics in ruminant feeds. Two types of instruments were tested using four feeds (corn silage, mixed hay, rye grass silage, soybean meal) and a total mixed ration. Two types of crumbled contaminants, low-density polyethylene and polystyrene, were accurately mixed at ratios of 0, 1, 3, and 5 mg g-1. The pool of the five matrices examined by the benchmark instrument (714-3333 nm) yielded an accuracy of approximately 0.8 mg g-1 and a detection limit of about 1 mg g-1, however, the errors could be halved in separate calibrations. A short wavelength range (714-1070 nm) or a smart NIRS instrument proved an acceptable discrimination of the concentrations. Following these preliminary results, any validation on other samples with different and powerful NIRS tools is encouraged.

Rapid detection of microplastics in feeds using near-infrared spectroscopy

Barbera Salvatore;Kaihara Hatsumi
;
Mabrouki Sabah;Glorio Patrucco Sara;Abid Khalil;Tassone Sonia
Last
2024-01-01

Abstract

The presence of microplastics in the forage and feedstuffs of domestic animals represents an imminent threat to the entire food chain that may reach humans since the particles could be transferred into the intestinal barriers and contaminate blood and animal products. Until now, there is no simple, rapid, sustainable, and reliable method to detect microplastics in animal feed. The objective of this study was to investigate the ability of near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to detect microplastics in ruminant feeds. Two types of instruments were tested using four feeds (corn silage, mixed hay, rye grass silage, soybean meal) and a total mixed ration. Two types of crumbled contaminants, low-density polyethylene and polystyrene, were accurately mixed at ratios of 0, 1, 3, and 5 mg g-1. The pool of the five matrices examined by the benchmark instrument (714-3333 nm) yielded an accuracy of approximately 0.8 mg g-1 and a detection limit of about 1 mg g-1, however, the errors could be halved in separate calibrations. A short wavelength range (714-1070 nm) or a smart NIRS instrument proved an acceptable discrimination of the concentrations. Following these preliminary results, any validation on other samples with different and powerful NIRS tools is encouraged.
2024
13
2
1
6
https://acta.imeko.org/index.php/acta-imeko/article/view/1663
Feeds; low density polyethylene; microplastics; near-infrared spectroscopy; polystyrene; SCÏOTM
Masoero Giorgio, Barbera Salvatore, Kaihara Hatsumi, Mabrouki Sabah, Glorio Patrucco Sara, Abid Khalil, Tassone Sonia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1984431
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