4.8 Article

Underestimation of Anthropogenic Bromoform Released into the Environment?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 3, Pages 1522-1533

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c05073

Keywords

disinfection byproducts; electrochlorination; atmosphere; proton-transfer-reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry; modeling

Funding

  1. Doctoral School of Environmental Sciences at Aix [ED251]
  2. French National Research Agency (ANR) [ANR-16-CE340009]

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Bromoform (CHBr3) is an important precursor of reactive bromine species in the troposphere and stratosphere. Previous models have only considered natural production of CHBr3 from marine organisms, but this study finds significantly higher levels of CHBr3 in water and air due to anthropogenic sources in an industrialized area. These findings suggest that industrial discharges may be an important missing factor in estimates of organic bromine flux to the atmosphere.
Bromoform (CHBr3) belongs to very-short-lived substances (VSLSs), which are important precursors of reactive bromine species (BrOx) contributing to tropospheric and stratospheric chemistry. To date, most models calculating bromine product emissions to the atmosphere only consider the natural production of CHBr3 from marine organisms such as macroalgae and phytoplankton. However, CHBr3 has many other anthropogenic sources (coastal industrial sites, desalination and wastewater plants, ballast waters, and seawater toilets) that may drastically increase the amounts emitted in the atmosphere. Here, we report the levels of CHBr3 released in water and air (according to real-time and offline measurements by protontransfer-reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PTR-ToF-MS) and gas chromatography with electron capture detection (GC-ECD)) in a highly industrialized area where 3 million cubic meters of chlorinated seawater is released each day, which were measured during six field campaigns (at sea and on land) distributed over 3 years. The highest levels found during this survey (which were correlated to the physical-chemical characteristics of the water, meteorological and hydrological conditions, salinity, and temperature gradients along the water column) reached 34.6 mu g L-1 in water (100-10 000 times higher than reported natural levels) and 3.9 ppbv in the air (100 times higher than the maximum reported value to date). These findings suggest the need to undertake sampling and analysis campaigns as dose as possible to chlorinated discharges, as anthropogenic CHBr3 sources from industrial discharges may be a missing factor in global flux estimates or organic bromine to the atmosphere.

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