Compound-Specific Stable Isotope Fractionation of Pesticides and Pharmaceuticals in a Mesoscale Aquifer Model.

Autor: Schürner, Heide K. V.1, Maier, Michael P.1, Eckert, Dominik2, Brejcha, Ramona1, Neumann, Claudia-Constanze1, Stumpp, Christine1, Cirpka, Olaf A.2, Elsner, Martin1 martin.elsner@helmholtz-muenchen.de
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Zdroj: Environmental Science & Technology. 6/7/2016, Vol. 50 Issue 11, p5729-5739. 11p.
Abstrakt: Compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA) receives increasing interest for its ability to detect natural degradation of pesticides and pharmaceuticals. Despite recent laboratory studies, CSIA investigations of such micropollutants in the environment are still rare. To explore the certainty of information obtainable by CSIA in a near-environmental setting, a pulse of the pesticide bentazone, the pesticide metabolite 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM), and the pharmaceuticals diclofenac and ibuprofen was released into a mesoscale aquifer with quasi-two-dimensional flow. Concentration breakthrough curves (BTC) of BAM and ibuprofen demonstrated neither degradation nor sorption. Bentazone was transformed but did not sorb significantly, whereas diclofenac showed both degradation and sorption. Carbon and nitrogen CSIA could be accomplished in similar concentrations as for "traditional" priority pollutants (low µg/L range), however, at the cost of uncertainties (0.4-0.5‰ (carbon), 1‰ (nitrogen)). Nonetheless, invariant carbon and nitrogen isotope values confirmed that BAM was neither degraded nor sorbed, while significant enrichment of 13C and in particular 15N corroborated transformation of diclofenac and bentazone. Retardation of diclofenac was reflected in additional 15N sorption isotope effects, whereas isotope fractionation of transverse dispersion could not be identified. These results provide a benchmark on the performance of CSIA to monitor the reactivity of micropollutants in aquifers and may guide future efforts to accomplish CSIA at even lower concentrations (ng/L range). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE