4.7 Article

The role of carbonate radical in limiting the persistence of sulfur-containing chemicals in sunlit natural waters

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 41, Issue 11, Pages 1775-1782

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0045-6535(00)00042-4

Keywords

photolysis; thioanisole; fenthion; dibenzothiophene

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Carbonate radical (. CO3-) is a selective oxidant that may be important in limiting the persistence of a number of sulfur-containing compounds in sunlit natural waters. Thioanisole, dibenzothiophene (DBT) and fenthion were selected to investigate the degradation pathway initiated by . CO3-; electron-rich sulfur compounds are particularly reactive towards the . CO3-. Using HPLC, GC, GC-MS and LC-MS for structural confirmation, the major photodegradation products of thioanisole and DBT were the corresponding sulfoxides. The sulfoxide products were further oxidized through reaction with . CO3- to the corresponding sulfone derivatives. Fenthion showed a similar pathway with appearance of fenthion sulfoxide as the major product. The proposed mechanism involves abstraction of an electron on sulfur to form a radical cation, which is then oxidized by dissolved oxygen. Each of the sulfur probes were further investigated in a sunlight simulator under varying matrix conditions. The highest rate constants occurred in the . CO3- matrix, and the lowest occurred in a matrix of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and bicarbonate. In synthetic and natural field water, thioanisole photodegraded faster than under direct photolysis, with half-lives of 75.1 and 85.8 min, respectively. Fenthion photodegraded more rapidly than thioanisole. DBT photodegraded rapidly in a . CO3- matrix with a half-life of 24.8 min, while the half-life of direct photolysis was 350 min. Photodegradation products of each compound were also investigated. Ultimately, . CO3- was found to contribute toward the photodegradation of sulfur-containing compounds in natural waters. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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