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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

Newly Identified Pollutant Found Widespread in the Atmosphere

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 16, 2026
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Newly Identified Pollutant Found Widespread in the Atmosphere
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A groundbreaking study has revealed an alarming presence of large molecular methylsiloxanes—specialized forms of silicone compounds—permeating the Earth’s atmosphere widely and persistently. Far from being confined to urban or industrial zones, these compounds have been detected across diverse environments including coastal, rural, and even forested regions. Researchers from Utrecht University and the University of Groningen have uncovered unexpectedly high concentrations of these chemicals, highlighting the urgency to understand their implications for human health and climate systems. Their findings, published recently in the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, challenge prior assumptions about the atmospheric behavior and sources of methylsiloxanes, raising awareness about this previously underappreciated class of synthetic pollutants.

Methylsiloxanes are silicon-based compounds extensively employed in numerous industrial applications such as lubricants, cosmetics, and household products due to their unique chemical properties. Traditionally, environmental monitoring focused on smaller, volatile methylsiloxanes emitted primarily through evaporation from consumer products. However, recent research shines a spotlight on complex, large molecular variants that do not evaporate easily and thus were not completely accounted for—in particular, those released as aerosol particles from traffic-related sources like ships and motor vehicles.

What makes these large molecular methylsiloxanes particularly concerning is their widespread distribution. Researchers measured airborne concentrations that surpassed prior expectations and were found not only in cities but surprisingly also in remote natural areas. For instance, São Paulo, Brazil, exhibited concentrations as high as 98 nanograms per cubic meter, which starkly contrasts with the 0.9 nanograms per cubic meter detected at an isolated forest site in Lithuania. A mid-range concentration was observed in Cabauw, a rural village in the Netherlands, registering about 2 nanograms per cubic meter. These widespread concentrations emphasize that emissions are not restricted to industrial hotspots but extend over vast geographical landscapes, pointing to long-range atmospheric transport.

Associate Professor Rupert Holzinger of Utrecht University, who co-led the study, emphasized the significance of the findings by stating that large molecular methylsiloxanes constitute between 2 to 4.3 percent of the total mass of organic aerosols in the atmosphere. This ratio makes them among the most abundant synthetic substances present in the air, far exceeding levels of other infamous pollutants such as PFAS, whose atmospheric presence often pales by several orders of magnitude in comparison. This remarkable abundance signals a substantial and previously under-recognized component of modern air pollution that has profound implications.

The continuous and global inhalation exposure to methylsiloxanes is yet poorly understood, representing a significant knowledge gap. Given their omnipresence in the atmosphere, it follows that humans inhale considerable quantities daily. Holzinger highlights that the daily inhalation dose of methylsiloxanes may in fact outpace that of other synthetic contaminants, including PFAS and microplastics, both of which have garnered substantial public and scientific concern. The paucity of toxicological data on these compounds underscores the urgent necessity for comprehensive health impact assessments.

Beyond human health, these silicone-based aerosols have the capacity to influence atmospheric chemistry and climate processes in ways that remain speculative but potentially substantial. Large molecular methylsiloxanes can alter the surface tension of aerosol particles, a property that critically affects how aerosols interact with water vapor and contribute to cloud formation. Additionally, they may interfere with ice nucleation processes, thereby influencing cloud microphysics, lifetimes, and radiative properties. Such changes could translate into measurable effects on regional and global climate patterns, highlighting the intricate interplay between human-made compounds and atmospheric dynamics.

The emissions trace back primarily to traffic-related sources, more specifically lubricant additives found in engine oils. Contrary to common assumptions that these lubricants function solely in mechanical roles without becoming airborne, research indicates that components within engine oil inadvertently enter the combustion chamber during engine operation. Due to their notable thermal stability and resistance to complete combustion at high temperatures, methylsiloxanes can survive the combustion process and exit the vehicle’s exhaust system, contributing to atmospheric loading.

This pathway of methylsiloxane release is corroborated by the observed dispersion patterns that resemble those of long-chain hydrocarbons—another hallmark of engine oil emissions. While hydrocarbons degrade or dilute rapidly during atmospheric transport, large molecular methylsiloxanes exhibit remarkable chemical stability, enabling them to persist and travel extensive distances from their source. This stability enhances their environmental footprint and suggests global-scale dispersion that compels further examination.

The methodology behind this study involved meticulous data collection and statistical analysis of atmospheric aerosol samples from multiple regions spanning different hemispheres, climatic zones, and socioeconomic backgrounds. By integrating samples from Brazil, Lithuania, and the Netherlands, the study benefits from a comprehensive perspective that enhances the relevance of its conclusions on a planetary scale.

The revelations about methylsiloxanes reflect a broader realization within environmental science: synthetic compounds are diversifying in form, function, and ecological impact beyond previously recognized boundaries. This discovery prompts a paradigm shift in how we monitor atmospheric pollution, emphasizing the need to include emerging synthetic aerosols that may have been overlooked due to their chemical complexity or assumed inertness.

Given the early stage of understanding regarding health outcomes, regulatory agencies and research institutions face a pressing challenge to implement targeted toxicological studies, exposure risk assessments, and improved emission control technologies. Unraveling the physiological implications of inhaling these compounds is essential to crafting effective public health guidelines and environmental policies.

As the climate crisis intensifies, understanding every contributor to atmospheric alterations becomes paramount. This includes anthropogenic aerosols like large molecular methylsiloxanes whose subtle but pervasive influence could amplify or mitigate climate feedback mechanisms. Future research must therefore prioritize characterizing their interactions with atmospheric particles, clouds, and radiation to inform climate modeling efforts accurately.

In conclusion, the pervasive presence of chemically stable, large molecular methylsiloxanes in the atmosphere represents a significant yet underexplored dimension of contemporary air pollution. Their widespread distribution, high concentrations relative to other synthetic pollutants, and potential impacts on human health and climate highlight an urgent frontier for environmental research. This study opens the door for closer scrutiny of silicone-based aerosols and urges the scientific community to address the unknowns related to their atmospheric chemistry and health risks, laying the groundwork for informed environmental management strategies worldwide.

Subject of Research: Not applicable

Article Title: Widespread occurrence of large molecular methylsiloxanes in ambient aerosols

News Publication Date: 16-Apr-2026

Web References: https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/26/5005/2026/

References: DOI: 10.5194/acp-26-5005-2026

Keywords

Atmospheric Chemistry, Methylsiloxanes, Air Pollution, Aerosols, Synthetic Pollutants, Engine Oil Emissions, Climate Change, Human Health Exposure, Atmospheric Transport

Tags: aerosol methylsiloxanes from trafficair quality and methylsiloxanesatmospheric silicone compoundsclimate effects of methylsiloxaneshuman health and silicone compoundsindustrial chemical pollutantslarge molecular methylsiloxanes pollutionmethylsiloxanes environmental impactnon-volatile silicone pollutantssources of atmospheric methylsiloxanessynthetic pollutants in atmospherewidespread atmospheric pollutants

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