Physical and chemical characterisation of laboratory-generated tyre wear particles
Physical and chemical characterisation of laboratory-generated tyre wear particles
Tyre wear particles are generated by the frictional forces between a tyre and the road during driving. Tyre wear represents one of the biggest sources of synthetic polymer-based material released into the environment, significantly contributing to microplastic pollution and the associated ecological consequences. However, the extent of tyre particle pollution is not fully understood, and research and understanding are hindered by a lack of described chemical compounds that meet all the criteria for an effective marker of tyre particles. The aims of this study were to develop a methodology for generating tyre particles using a pin-on-disc tribometer; and to distinguish the chemical components in the particles – using two-dimensional gas chromatography-mass spectrometry – to propose a suite of potential markers. The results show that the morphology of the tyre particles reflected that of particles generated in previous literature and during driving. Additionally, the suggested markers were common across the three tyre brands studied here, thus meeting one of the criteria for a successful marker. Future research into measuring the concentration of tyre particles in environmental samples is necessary to understand further their distribution, and assessing the contribution of tyre particles to non-exhaust emissions can inform on future engineering strategies to minimise their release.
Microplastics, Tyre wear, Physical characterisation, Chemical characterisation, Microscopy, Gas-chromatography mass spectrometry
70-83
Sivyer, Adeline
e6b47a44-a258-41d4-b136-97302c350d20
Tariq, Zainab
b099d343-2a8b-427b-9f13-6039c0d49eb7
Langley, G. John
7ac80d61-b91d-4261-ad17-255f94ea21ea
Williams, Ian
c9d674ac-ee69-4937-ab43-17e716266e22
Sivyer, Adeline
e6b47a44-a258-41d4-b136-97302c350d20
Tariq, Zainab
b099d343-2a8b-427b-9f13-6039c0d49eb7
Langley, G. John
7ac80d61-b91d-4261-ad17-255f94ea21ea
Williams, Ian
c9d674ac-ee69-4937-ab43-17e716266e22
Sivyer, Adeline, Tariq, Zainab, Langley, G. John and Williams, Ian
(2024)
Physical and chemical characterisation of laboratory-generated tyre wear particles.
Detritus, 28, .
(doi:10.31025/2611-4135/2024.19411).
Abstract
Tyre wear particles are generated by the frictional forces between a tyre and the road during driving. Tyre wear represents one of the biggest sources of synthetic polymer-based material released into the environment, significantly contributing to microplastic pollution and the associated ecological consequences. However, the extent of tyre particle pollution is not fully understood, and research and understanding are hindered by a lack of described chemical compounds that meet all the criteria for an effective marker of tyre particles. The aims of this study were to develop a methodology for generating tyre particles using a pin-on-disc tribometer; and to distinguish the chemical components in the particles – using two-dimensional gas chromatography-mass spectrometry – to propose a suite of potential markers. The results show that the morphology of the tyre particles reflected that of particles generated in previous literature and during driving. Additionally, the suggested markers were common across the three tyre brands studied here, thus meeting one of the criteria for a successful marker. Future research into measuring the concentration of tyre particles in environmental samples is necessary to understand further their distribution, and assessing the contribution of tyre particles to non-exhaust emissions can inform on future engineering strategies to minimise their release.
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 September 2024
Keywords:
Microplastics, Tyre wear, Physical characterisation, Chemical characterisation, Microscopy, Gas-chromatography mass spectrometry
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495693
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495693
ISSN: 2611-4135
PURE UUID: 256c8066-c07f-41df-bcd7-07090eaf3387
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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2024 17:45
Last modified: 21 Nov 2024 03:02
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Author:
Adeline Sivyer
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