Source: The Conversation, 1/13/26
In this article for The Conversation, Xiangyu Liu, a research fellow at the School of Environment and Science and Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University, describes new research he coauthored that was recently published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials: Plastics.
'My colleagues and I first conducted a meta-analysis – a statistical synthesis of existing research – analysing data from 30 peer-reviewed studies. We looked at how common plastics such as polyethylene and polypropylene behave under different conditions. One factor stood out above all others: temperature. As the temperature of the liquid inside a container increases, the release of microplastics generally increases too. In the studies we reviewed, reported releases ranged from a few hundred particles to more than 8 million particles per litre, depending on the material and study design.'