4.7 Article

Adsorption and breakdown of penicillin antibiotic in the presence of titanium oxide nanoparticles in water

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 87, Issue 8, Pages 911-917

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2012.01.044

Keywords

Adsorption; Ampicillin; Nanoparticles; Titanium oxide; Pharmaceutical contamination; Fate and transport

Funding

  1. NASA-Michigan Space
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. Hope College Department of Geological & Environmental Sciences
  4. Hope College Chemistry Department

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The fate and transport of antibiotics in natural water systems is controlled in part by interactions with nanometer (10(-9) m) metal oxide particles. Experiments were performed by mixing solutions of ampicillin (AMP), a common, penicillin-class human and veterinary antibiotic, with 25 nm-TiO2 (anatase) nanoparticles at different pH conditions. Both sorption and degradation of AMP were observed in the AMP-nanoparticle solutions. For AMP concentrations from similar to 3 mu M to 2.9 mM the overall AMP removal from solution can be described by linear isotherms with removal coefficients (K-r) of 3028 (+/- 267) L kg(-1) at pH 2, 11,533 (+/- 823) L kg(-1) at pH 4, 12,712 (+/- 672) L kg(-1) at pH 6, and 1941 (+/- 342) L kg(-1) at pH 8. Mass spectral analysis of AMP solutions after removal of the solid nanoparticles yielded ions that indicate the presence of peniclloic acid, penilloic acid and related de-ammoniated by-products as possible compounds resulting from the degradation of AMP at the TiO2 surface. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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