4.7 Article

Temperature Dependence of the Organic Carbon/Water Partition Ratios (Koc) of Volatile Methylsiloxanes

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 240-245

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.estlett.7b00138

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2011-484]

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Knowing the temperature dependence of the organic carbon/water partition ratios (K-oc) of volatile methylsiloxanes (VMS) is required to understand their environmental fate. We measured the Koc of two linear VMS (IVMS), three cyclic VMS (cVMS), and six polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) at 25, 15, 10, and 5 degrees C and calculated their enthalpies and entropies of sorption to organic carbon (Delta H-oc and Delta S-oc, respectively). The Delta H-oc of VMS ranged from -79.2 to -45.8 kJ mol(-1) while the Delta H-oc of the PCBs ranged from -68.7 to -29.3 kJ mol(-1). Previously reported measurements of the enthalpy of phase change between octanol and water (Delta H-ow) for cVMS (11.3-68.8 kJ mol(-1)) differed substantially from our Delta H-oc measurements, even showing different signs (negative versus positive). Literature data of Delta H-oc and Delta H-ow for PCBs (-61 to -17 kJ mol(-1)) are closer to our measured values of Delta H-oc for the PCBs showing the same sign (negative) with differences within a factor of 2 in the majority of the cases. Comparison of all available data for PCBs and VMS indicated that there may be important differences between Delta H-oc and Delta H-ow, especially for the VMS. Therefore, assuming Delta H-oc equals Delta H-ow in environmental fate models may be a source of substantial error.

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