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1.
ACS Omega ; 9(21): 23013-23020, 2024 May 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38826532

RESUMEN

A fluorosulfate ion (FSO3-) is a hydrolysis product of sulfuryl fluoride (SO2F2), which is widely used to fumigate buildings, soil, construction materials, and postharvest commodities, and is a potent greenhouse gas. It is a potential marker for biological exposure to SO2F2 and for monitoring the progress of reactions used to scrub SO2F2 from fumigation vent gases. Here, we report a simple and inexpensive potentiometric method for determining FSO3- using a commercial nitrate-selective electrode and discuss its application. The method is suitable for solutions between 0.0025 mM and 660 mM FSO3- at initial pH between 5 and 9. Halide interference depends on its molar ratio to FSO3- and follows the sequence, F- < Cl- < Br- ≪ I-. Halide interference can be eliminated by adding silver sulfate. Interference by bicarbonate can be eliminated by H2SO4 pretreatment, and interference by phosphate or pyrophosphate by MgSO4 addition. Sulfate does not interfere, as it does in ion chromatography. Satisfactory method detection limits for FSO3- in spiked aqueous extracts of 11 fruits were obtained. The method accurately quantified the yield of FSO3- relative to that of F- in base hydrolysis of SO2F2. This study demonstrates that the developed method is highly selective, convenient, and sensitive and thus can be of great value in practice.

2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 55(12): 8299-8308, 2021 06 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34032409

RESUMEN

The Fenton reaction is limited by a narrow acidic pH range, the slow reduction of Fe(III), and susceptibility of the nonselective hydroxyl radical (HO•) to scavenging by water constituents. Here, we employed the biodegradable chelating agent picolinic acid (PICA) to address these concerns. Compared to the classical Fenton reaction at pH 3.0, PICA greatly accelerated the degradation of atrazine, sulfamethazine, and various substituted phenols at pH 5.0 in a reaction with autocatalytic characteristics. Although HO• served as the principal oxidant, a high-spin, end-on hydroperoxo intermediate, tentatively identified as PICA-FeIII-OOH, also exhibited reactivity toward several test compounds. Chloride release from the oxidation of 2,4,6-trichlorophenol and the positive slope of the Hammett correlation for a series of halogenated phenols were consistent with PICA-FeIII-OOH reacting as a nucleophilic oxidant. Compared to HO•, PICA-FeIII-OOH is less sensitive to potential scavengers in environmental water samples. Kinetic analysis reveals that PICA facilitates Fe(III)/Fe(II) transformation by accelerating Fe(III) reduction by H2O2. Autocatalysis is ascribed to the buildup of Fe(II) from the reduction of Fe(III) by H2O2 as well as PICA oxidation products. PICA assistance in the Fenton reaction may be beneficial to wastewater treatment because it favors iron cycling, extends the pH range, and balances oxidation universality with selectivity.


Asunto(s)
Hierro , Oxidantes , Peróxido de Hidrógeno , Cinética , Oxidación-Reducción , Ácidos Picolínicos , Agua
3.
Environ Pollut ; 265(Pt B): 115006, 2020 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32593903

RESUMEN

The impact of organic bulking agents on the biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons in crude oil impacted soils was evaluated in batch laboratory experiments. Crude oil impacted soils from three separate locations were amended with fertilizer and bulking agents consisting of biochars derived from walnut shells or ponderosa pine wood chips produced at 900 °C. The batch reactors were incubated at 25 °C and sampled at pre-determined intervals to measure changes in total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) over time. For the duration of the incubation, the soil moisture content was adjusted to 75% of the maximum water holding capacity (MWHC) and prior to each sampling event, the sample was manually stirred. Results show that the addition of fertilizer and bulking agents increased biodegradation rates of TPH. Soil samples amended with ponderosa pine wood biochar achieved the highest biodegradation rate, whereas the walnut shell biochar was inhibitory to TPH biodegradation. The beneficial impact of biochars on TPH biodegredation was more pronounced for a soil impacted with lighter hydrocarbons compared to a soil impacted with heavier hydrocarbons. This study demonstrates that some biochars, in combination with fertilizer, have the potential to be a low-technology and eco-friendly remediation strategy for crude oil impacted soils.


Asunto(s)
Petróleo , Contaminantes del Suelo/análisis , Biodegradación Ambiental , Carbón Orgánico , Hidrocarburos , Suelo , Microbiología del Suelo
4.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(18): 10845-10854, 2019 Sep 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31373486

RESUMEN

A variety of peptidic and proteinaceous contaminants (e.g., proteins, toxins, pathogens) present in the environment may pose risk to human health and wildlife. Peroxymonosulfate is a strong oxidant (EH0 = 1.82 V for HSO5-, the predominant species at environmental pH values) that may hold promise for the deactivation of proteinaceous contaminants. Relatively little quantitative information exists on the rates of peroxymonosulfate reactions with free amino acids. Here, we studied the oxidation of 19 of the 20 standard proteinogenic amino acids (all except cysteine) by peroxymonosulfate without explicit activation. Reaction half-lives at pH 7 ranged from milliseconds to hours. Amino acids possessing sulfur-containing, heteroaromatic, or substituted aromatic side chains were the most susceptible to oxidation by peroxymonosulfate, with rates of transformation decreasing in the order methionine > tryptophan > tyrosine > histidine. The rate of tryptophan oxidation did not decrease in the presence of an aquatic natural organic matter. Singlet oxygen resulting from peroxymonosulfate self-decomposition, while detected by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, was unlikely to be the principal reactive species. Our results demonstrate that peroxymonosulfate is capable of oxidizing 19 amino acids without explicit activation and that solvent-exposed methionine and tryptophan residues are likely initial targets of oxidation in peptides and proteins.


Asunto(s)
Aminoácidos , Agua , Oxidación-Reducción , Peróxidos
5.
Sci Total Environ ; 615: 169-176, 2018 Feb 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28968578

RESUMEN

Aging soot in soil under neutral aqueous condition for 30days significantly (p<0.05) reduced the apparent gastrointestinal bioaccessibility (Bapp) of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and PAH derivatives (d-PAHs) natively present in a composite fuel soot sample. Bapp was determined under fasting conditions by a previously developed in vitro digestive model that includes silicone sheet as a third phase absorptive sink in the small intestinal stage. Redistribution of contaminants from soot to soil, determined in independent experiments, was too small to affect Bapp. Prior uptake by soot of a commercial humic acid representing dissolved soil organic matter had no impact on Bapp. We identified two causes for the reduction in Bapp by soil and found they were approximately additive. One is an aging time-independent "matrix effect" attributable to competitive sorption by the soil of labile contaminant that is desorbed from the soot during the digestion test. The other is the dissolution of soluble substances from the soot during the aging process that increases soot surface area and nanoporosity. The increased surface area and nanoporosity drive contaminants from labile to nonlabile states in the soot and decrease the desorption into the digestive fluid, the former contributing most to the reduction in Bapp. The present study shows that mixing of raw soot with soil has important effects, both aging and non-aging, on the bioaccessibility of soot-borne contaminants.


Asunto(s)
Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/análisis , Hollín/análisis , Disponibilidad Biológica , Suelo , Agua
6.
Environ Pollut ; 218: 901-908, 2016 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27531622

RESUMEN

Ingestion of soot present in soil or other environmental particles is expected to be an important route of exposure to nitro and oxygenated derivatives of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). We measured the apparent bioaccessibility (Bapp) of native concentrations of 1-nitropyrene (1N-PYR), 9-fluorenone (9FLO), anthracene-9,10-dione (ATQ), benzo[a]anthracene-7,12-dione (BaAQ), and benzanthrone (BZO) in a composite fuel soot sample using a previously-developed in vitro human gastrointestinal model that includes silicone sheet as a third-phase absorptive sink. Along with Bapp, we determined the 24-h sheet-digestive fluid partition coefficient (Ks,24h), the soot residue-fluid distribution ratio of the labile sorbed fraction after digestion (Kr,lab), and the maximum possible (limiting) bioaccessibility, Blim. The Bapp of PAH derivatives was positively affected by the presence of the sheet due to mass-action removal of the sorbed compounds. In all cases Bapp increased with imposition of fed conditions. The enhancement of Bapp under fed conditions is due to increasingly favorable mass transfer of target compounds from soot to fluid (increasing bile acid concentration, or adding food lipids) or transfer from fluid to sheet (by raising small intestinal pH). Food lipids may also enhance Bapp by mobilizing contaminants from nonlabile to labile states of the soot. Compared to the parent PAH, the derivatives had larger Kr,lab, despite having lower partition coefficients to various hydrophobic reference phases including silicone sheet. The Blim of the derivatives under the default conditions of the model ranged from 65.5% to 34.4%, in the order, 1N-PYR > ATQ > 9FLO > BZO > BaAQ, with no significant correlation with hydrophobic parameters, nor consistent relationship with Blim of the parent PAH. Consistent with earlier experiments on a wider range of PAHs, the results suggest that a major determinant of bioaccessibility is the distribution of chemical between nonlabile and labile states in the original solid.


Asunto(s)
Digestión/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/farmacocinética , Contaminantes del Suelo/farmacocinética , Hollín/farmacocinética , Absorción Fisicoquímica , Antraquinonas/análisis , Antraquinonas/química , Antraquinonas/farmacocinética , Benzo(a)Antracenos/análisis , Benzo(a)Antracenos/química , Benzo(a)Antracenos/farmacocinética , Disponibilidad Biológica , Fluorenos/análisis , Fluorenos/química , Fluorenos/farmacocinética , Absorción Gastrointestinal/fisiología , Humanos , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/análisis , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/química , Pirenos/análisis , Pirenos/química , Pirenos/farmacocinética , Siliconas/química , Contaminantes del Suelo/análisis , Contaminantes del Suelo/química , Hollín/análisis , Hollín/química
7.
Environ Sci Technol ; 49(24): 14641-8, 2015 Dec 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26551410

RESUMEN

We investigated the effects of changing physiological conditions in the digestive tract expected with food ingestion on the apparent bioaccessibility (Bapp) of 11 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in a fuel soot. A previously established in vitro digestive model was applied that included silicone sheet as a third-phase absorptive sink simulating passive transfer of PAHs to intestinal epithelium in the small intestine stage. The Bapp is defined as the fraction found in the digestive fluid plus sheet after digestion. We determined that Bapp was independent of gastric pH and addition of nonlipid milk representing dietary proteins and carbohydrates, whereas it increased with bile acids concentration (2.0-10 g/L), small intestinal pH (5.00-7.35), and addition of soybean oil representing dietary lipid (100% and 200% of the mean daily ingestion by 2-5 year olds in the U.S.). Bapp of PAHs increases with small intestinal pH due to the combined effects of mass transfer promotion from nonlabile to labile sorbed states in the soot, weaker sorption of the labile state, and increasingly favorable partitioning from the digestive fluid to the silicone sink. Under fed conditions, Bapp increases with inclusion of lipids due to the combined effects of mass transfer promotion from nonlabile to labile states, and increasingly favorable partitioning into bile acid micelles. Our results indicate significant variability in soot PAH bioaccessibility within the range of physiological conditions experienced by humans, and suggest that bioaccessibility will increase with coconsumption of food, especially food with high fat content.


Asunto(s)
Ingestión de Alimentos , Intestino Delgado/fisiología , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/farmacocinética , Hollín/química , Ácidos y Sales Biliares , Disponibilidad Biológica , Digestión/fisiología , Tracto Gastrointestinal/metabolismo , Humanos , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Intestino Delgado/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/análisis , Siliconas , Aceite de Soja/farmacología
8.
Environ Sci Technol ; 49(6): 3419-26, 2015 Mar 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25671390

RESUMEN

Sorption to black carbons is an important sink for organic contaminants in sediments. Previous research has suggested that black carbons (graphite, activated carbon, and biochar) mediate the degradation of nitrated compounds by sulfides by at least two different pathways: reduction involving electron transfer from sulfides through conductive carbon regions to the target contaminant (nitroglycerin) and degradation by sulfur-based intermediates formed by sulfide oxidation (RDX). In this study, we evaluated the applicability of black carbon-mediated reactions to a wider variety of contaminant structures, including nitrated and halogenated aromatic compounds, halogenated heterocyclic aromatic compounds, and halogenated alkanes. Among these compounds, black carbon-mediated transformation by sulfides over a 3-day time scale was limited to nitroaromatic compounds. The reaction for a series of substituted nitroaromatics proceeded by reduction, as indicated by formation of 3-bromoaniline from 3-bromonitrobenzene, and inverse correlation of log kobs with energy of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (ELUMO). The log kobs was correlated with sorbed sulfide concentration, but no reduction of 3-bromonitrobenzene was observed in the presence of graphite and sulfite, thiosulfate, or polysulfides. Whereas nitroglycerin reduction occurred in an electrochemical cell containing sheet graphite electrodes in which the reagents were placed in separate compartments, nitroaromatic reduction only occurred when sulfides were present in the same compartment. The results suggest that black carbon-mediated reduction of sorbed nitroaromatics by sulfides involves electron transfer directly from sorbed sulfides rather than transfer of electrons through conductive carbon regions. The existence of three different reaction pathways suggests a complexity to the sulfide-carbon system compared to the iron-carbon system, where contaminants are reduced by electron transfer through conductive carbon regions.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Ambientales/química , Nitrocompuestos/química , Hollín/química , Compuestos de Anilina/química , Carbono/química , Compuestos Inorgánicos de Carbono , Transporte de Electrón , Grafito/química , Estructura Molecular , Nitrobencenos/química , Nitroglicerina/química , Oxidación-Reducción , Sulfuros , Azufre/química , Tiosulfatos/química
9.
Environ Sci Technol ; 49(6): 3905-12, 2015 Mar 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25692464

RESUMEN

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) associated with soot or black carbon can enter the human digestive tract by unintentional ingestion of soil or other particles. This study investigated the bioaccessibility of 11 PAHs in a composite fuel soot sample using an in vitro digestive model that included silicone sheet as an absorptive sink during the small intestinal digestion stage. The sheet was meant to simulate the passive transfer of PAHs in lumen fluid across the small intestinal epithelium, which was postulated to promote desorption of labile PAHs from the soot by steepening the soot-fluid concentration gradient. We show that the presence of silicone sheet during a 4 h default digestion time significantly increased the apparent bioaccessible fraction (Bapp, %), defined as the sum in the sheet and digestive fluid relative to the total PAH determined. The ability to increase Bapp for most PAHs leveled off above a sheet-to-soot ratio of 2.0 g per 50 mg, indicating that the sheet is an effective absorptive sink and promotes desorption in the mentioned way. Enhancement of Bapp by the sheet correlated positively with the octanol-water partition coefficient (Kow), even though the partition coefficient of PAH between sheet and digestive fluid (which contains bile acid micelles) correlated negatively with Kow. It was hypothesized that PAHs initially in the soot exist in labile and nonlabile states. The fraction of labile PAH still sorbed to the soot residue after digestion, and the maximum possible (limiting) bioaccessibility (Blim) could be estimated by varying the sheet-to-soot ratio. We show conclusively that the increase in bioccessibility due to the presence of the sheet is accounted for by a corresponding decrease in fraction of labile PAH still sorbed to the soot. The Blim ranged from 30.8 to 62.4%, independent of molecular size. The nonlabile fraction of individual PAHs (69.2-37.6% in this case) is therefore large and needs to be taken into account in risk assessment.


Asunto(s)
Tracto Gastrointestinal/metabolismo , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/farmacocinética , Contaminantes del Suelo/química , Hollín/química , Digestión/fisiología , Absorción Gastrointestinal/fisiología , Humanos , Técnicas In Vitro , Cinética , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/análisis , Siliconas
10.
Environ Sci Technol ; 48(22): 13392-401, 2014 Nov 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25322258

RESUMEN

Quaternary ammonium cationic polymers, such as poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride) (polyDADMAC) are widely used for coagulating and removing negatively charged particles and dissolved organic matter (DOM) from drinking water. Their use, however, has been linked to the formation of carcinogenic N-nitrosamines as byproducts during chloramine-based drinking water disinfection. In this study, a novel quaternary phosphonium cationic polymer, poly(diallyldiethylphosphonium chloride) (polyDADEPC), was synthesized such that the quaternary nitrogen atom of polyDADMAC was substituted with a phosphorus atom. Formation potential tests revealed that even under strong nitrosation conditions, polyDADEPC and related lower-order P-based compounds formed oxygenated and not nitrosated products. Bench-scale jar tests using three different source waters further demonstrated that polyDADEPC achieved coagulation performance comparable to commercial polyDADMACs for particle and DOM removals within the typical dose range used for drinking water treatment. This work highlights the potential use of a phosphonium coagulant polymer, polyDADEPC, as a viable alternative to polyDADMAC to avoid nitrosated byproduct formation during chloramination.


Asunto(s)
Nitrosaminas/análisis , Compuestos Organofosforados/síntesis química , Polímeros/síntesis química , Compuestos Alílicos/química , Compuestos de Amonio/química , Cloraminas/análisis , Desinfección , Floculación , Nitrosación , Compuestos Organofosforados/química , Polímeros/química , Compuestos de Amonio Cuaternario/química
11.
Environ Sci Technol ; 47(13): 7129-36, 2013 Jul 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23725551

RESUMEN

Recent research has demonstrated that black carbons catalyze the transformation of a range of nitrated explosives sorbed to the carbon surfaces in the presence of sulfides. Although surface oxygenated functional groups, particularly quinones, and electrical conductivity have both been hypothesized to promote these reactions, the importance of these properties has not been tested. In this work, the importance of electrical conductivity was addressed by producing chars of increasing electrical conductivity via pyrolysis of wood shavings at increasing temperature. The reactivity of chars with respect to transformation of the explosive RDX in the presence of sulfides correlated with electrical conductivity. Oxygenated functional groups were apparently not involved, as demonstrated by the elimination of reactivity of an activated carbon after ozone treatment or sorption of model quinones to the activated carbon surface. Although RDX transformation correlated with char electrical conductivity, no RDX transformation was observed when RDX was physically separated from sulfides but electrically connected through an electrochemical cell. RDX transformation occurred in the presence of a surface-associated sulfur species. The correlation with char electrical conductivity suggests that sulfides are oxidized on carbon surfaces to products that serve as potent nucleophiles promoting RDX transformation.


Asunto(s)
Carbono/química , Sustancias Explosivas/química , Hollín/química , Sulfuros/química , Triazinas/química , Conductividad Eléctrica
12.
Environ Sci Technol ; 46(13): 7128-34, 2012 Jul 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22681742

RESUMEN

Indirect (sensitized) photolysis by natural organic matter (NOM), mainly from terrestrial sources, can be an important mechanism for attenuation of organic contaminants in estuarine waters, but the effect of salt gradients has been poorly investigated. We studied Suwannee River NOM-sensitized photolysis of 17ß-estradiol (E2) in freshwater and saline media. Indirect photolysis by 4 mg-C/L SRNOM was much faster than direct photolysis, and quenching by sorbic acid verified the importance of triplet-excited NOM chromophores. Increasing halide concentrations up to seawater levels decreased the photolysis rate by 90%, with approximately 70% of this decrease associated with ionic strength effects, and the remainder due to halide-specific effects. Bromide (0.8 mM in seawater) accounted for 70% of the halide-specific effect. Halide promotion of NOM chromophore photobleaching was shown to play a major role in the halide-specific effect. Compared to chromophore bleaching, indirect photolysis of E2 was 230% faster in freshwater, but 63% slower in seawater. The involvement of hydroxyl radical (HO(•)) in indirect photolysis of E2 was ruled out by the lack of suppression by tert-butanol. Experiments in D(2)O-H(2)O demonstrated that (1)O(2) was unimportant in freshwater, but accounted for 42% of NOM-sensitized photolysis of E2 in seawater. We project that, as a parcel of water containing E2 moves through the gradient from freshwater to seawater, overall photolysis will decline due to ionic strength, indirect photolysis will decrease due to specific halide effects on NOM photobleaching, and indirect photolysis will decline relative to direct photolysis. Estuarine contaminant fate models may need to account for halide impacts on indirect photolysis of contaminants.


Asunto(s)
Estradiol/análisis , Fotólisis , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/análisis , Agua/análisis , Bromuros/química , Halógenos/química , Iones/química , Compuestos Orgánicos/química , Concentración Osmolar , Oxígeno/química , Ríos/química , Salinidad , Agua de Mar/análisis
13.
Environ Sci Technol ; 40(24): 7757-63, 2006 Dec 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17256524

RESUMEN

Black carbon (BC) plays a potentially important role in the availability of pollutants in soils and sediments. Recent evidence points to the possible attenuation of the high surface activity of raw BC by natural substances. We studied the effects of soil humic (HA) and fulvic (FA) acids on the surface properties and affinity for organic compounds of synthesized wood charcoal. Char powder suspended in a solution of HA or FA was loaded with organic matter via adsorption, evaporation of the water, or coflocculation with Al3+. These treatments were chosen to simulate initial and more advanced stages of environmental exposure. Coevaporation dramatically reduced the N2 Brunauer-Emmett-Teller total surface area of the char, but only moderately the CO2 cumulative surface area up to 1.4 nm. Organic compound adsorption was suppressed in proportion to molecular size, benzene < naphthalene < phenanthrene and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene < phenanthrene, for humics in the adsorbed and coflocculated states, respectively. Humic substances also increased the linearity of the isotherms. The model we propose assumes that humic substances are restricted to the external surface where they act as pore blocking agents or competitive adsorbates, depending on the temperature and adsorbate size. Nitrogen is blocked from the internal pore space due to stiffness at 77 K of humic strands extending into pore throats, giving an artificially low surface area. Together with previous results, this finding indicates that N2 may not detect BC microporosity in geosorbents. At higher temperatures (CO2, 273 K; organics, 293 K), humic strands are more flexible, allowing access to interior pores. The counterintuitive molecular size dependence of adsorption suppression by humics is due to a molecular sieving effect in pores in which the adsorption space available to the organic compound is more and more restricted to external sites.


Asunto(s)
Benzopiranos/química , Sustancias Húmicas , Hollín/química , Adsorción , Soluciones , Propiedades de Superficie
14.
Environ Toxicol Chem ; 24(3): 741-9, 2005 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15779776

RESUMEN

We examined the biodegradation and desorption of a set of 15 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) compounds in coal tar-contaminated soil at a former manufactured gas plant site to evaluate the feasibility of in situ bioremediation. Experiments were conducted in well-mixed aerobic soil suspensions containing various additives over a 93- to 106-d period. In general, both biotransformation and desorption decreased with PAH ring size, becoming negligible for the six-ring PAH compounds. Biodegradation by indigenous microorganisms was strongly accelerated by addition of inorganic nutrients (N, P, K, and trace metals). The rates of biotransformation of PAH compounds by indigenous microorganisms in nutrient-amended flasks outpaced their maximum (i.e., chelate-enhanced) rates of desorption to an infinite sink (Tenax) in sterilized systems run in parallel, suggesting that indigenous organisms facilitated desorption. Biodegradation by indigenous organisms in nutrient-amended flasks appeared to be unaffected by the addition of a site-derived bacterial enrichment culture, resulting in approximately 100-fold higher aromatic dioxygenase levels, and by the addition of 0.01 M chelating agent (citrate or pyrophosphate), although such chelating agents greatly enhanced desorption in microbially inactivated flasks. The strong ability of nutrients to enhance degradation of the bioavailable PAHs indicates that their persistence for many decades at this site likely results from nutrient-limited natural biodegradation, and it also suggests that an effective strategy for their bioremediation could consist simply of adding inorganic nutrients.


Asunto(s)
Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/metabolismo , Contaminantes del Suelo/metabolismo , Adsorción , Biodegradación Ambiental , Quelantes , Citratos , Alquitrán , Recuento de Colonia Microbiana , Difosfatos , Estudios de Evaluación como Asunto , Gasolina , Residuos Industriales , Metales , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/análisis , Hidrocarburos Policíclicos Aromáticos/química , Citrato de Sodio , Contaminantes del Suelo/análisis
15.
J Environ Qual ; 33(4): 1314-21, 2004.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15254113

RESUMEN

Sorption of hydrophobic compounds in soils often shows nonlinearity, competition, and hysteresis. Since such behaviors have been associated with organic polymers in glassy state, it has been postulated that some forms of soil humic substances are glassy. The glassy state is favored by properties that decrease the flexibility of macromolecules, such as cross-linking, presence of unsaturated bonds, and high molecular weight. Polyvalent metal ions, which are abundant in soils, may cross-link humic substances by coordinating to multiple functional groups on different strands. Accordingly, we prepared an Al(3+)-cross-linked humic acid (Al-HA) from the H(+) form (H-HA) of a soil humic acid by a flocculation technique that leaves Al ions bound to organic groups. Sorption of naphthalene and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene (TCB) on H-HA was nonlinear, competitive, and slightly hysteretic, in agreement with previous studies showing glass transition temperatures of humic acids that lie above room temperature. Nonlinearity, competition, and hysteresis were all enhanced in Al-HA, validating the hypothesis that metal ion cross-linking enhances nonideal sorption. Application of a glassy polymer sorption model reveals that cross-linking increases the affinity of solutes for the hole domain relative to the dissolution domain. The results (i) indicate that isolated, purified soil humic acid behaves like a glassy solid, (ii) indicate that metal-ion cross-linking creates a more rigid-chain structure and supports a link between nonideal sorption and the glassy character of soil organic matter, and (iii) underscore the importance of metal ions on humic structure in relation to sorption of hydrophobic organic compounds.


Asunto(s)
Aluminio/química , Clorobencenos/química , Sustancias Húmicas/análisis , Naftalenos/química , Adsorción , Tamaño de la Partícula , Polímeros/química
16.
Environ Sci Technol ; 37(2): 409-17, 2003 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12564916

RESUMEN

Charcoal is found in water, soil, and sediment where it may act as a sorbent of organic pollutants. The sorption of organic compounds to natural solids often shows hysteresis. The purpose of this study was to determine the source of pronounced hysteresis that we found in the sorption of a hydrophobic compound (benzene) in water to a maple-wood charcoal prepared by oxygen-limited pyrolysis at 673 K. Gas adsorption (N2, Ar, CO2), 13C NMR, and FTIR show the charcoal to be a microporous solid composed primarily of elemental (aromatic) C and secondarily of carboxyl and phenolic C. Nonlocal density functional theory (N2, Ar) and Monte Carlo (CO2) calculations reveal a porosity of 0.15 cm3/g, specific surface area of 400 m2/g, and appreciable porosity in ultramicropores < 10 A. Benzene sorption-desorption conditions were chosen to eliminate artificial causes of hysteresis (rate-limiting diffusion, degradation, colloids effect). Charcoal sorbed up to its own weight of benzene at approximately 69% of benzene water solubility. Sorption was highly irreversible over most of the range tested (10(-4)-10(3) microg/mL). A dimensionless irreversibility index (/i) (0 < or = /i < or = 1) based on local slopes of adsorption and desorption branches was evaluated at numerous places along the isotherm. /i decreases as C increases, from 0.9-1 at low concentration to approximately 0 (approximately fully reversible) at the highest concentrations. Using sedimentation and volumetric displacement measurements, benzene is observed to cause pronounced swelling (up to > 2-fold) of the charcoal particles. It is proposed that hysteresis is due to pore deformation by the solute, which results in the pathway of sorption being different than the pathway of desorption and which leads to entrapment of some adsorbate as the polyaromatic scaffold collapses during desorption. It is suggested that intra-charcoal mass transport may be influenced by structural rearrangement of the solid, in addition to molecular diffusion.


Asunto(s)
Benceno/química , Carbón Orgánico/química , Modelos Químicos , Adsorción , Difusión , Contaminantes Ambientales , Porosidad , Solubilidad
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