Litcius/Paper detail

Microplastics and road markings: the role of glass beads and loss estimation

Tomasz E. Burghardt, Anton Pashkevich, Darko Babić, Harald Mosböck, Darko Babić, Lidia Żakowska

2021Transportation Research Part D Transport and Environment68 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Road markings are often listed amongst meaningful contributors to pollution with microplastics. However, the reported estimates do not address the renewal frequency and its association with the key parameter of road markings – retroreflectivity. This parameter, achieved because of a layer of glass beads on the road markings surface, fails before the plastic-bearing layer could be abraded. Field and laboratory assessment indicated the presence of several layers of paint and glass beads, confirming that the road markings were renewed before abrasion could occur. A methodology to employ luminance histograms to estimate loss of road markings was developed and used to approximate the emissions at selected exemplary locations. The estimates indicated that road marking loss at the most used areas of pedestrian crossings was below 6%, which is much less than previously reported. Thus, the emissions of microplastics of any dimension from this source were calculated to be between 0.1 and 4.3 g/person/year (except in Nordic countries, where 56.3 g/person/year could be reached). Consequently, road markings do not appear to be as significant source of microplastic pollution as was reported before, except for specific local considerations.

Topics & Concepts

MicroplasticsLuminanceEnvironmental scienceRoad surfaceRoad trafficPollutionPedestrianAbrasion (mechanical)Environmental engineeringTransport engineeringForensic engineeringComputer scienceEngineeringCivil engineeringEnvironmental chemistryArtificial intelligenceEcologyChemistryBiologyMechanical engineeringMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesAir Quality and Health Impacts