Environmental dechlorination of PCBs
Autor: | Donna L. Bedard, James Claude Carnahan, Helen Feng, John F. Brown, Michael J. Brennan, Ralph J. May |
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Rok vydání: | 1987 |
Předmět: |
education.field_of_study
Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis Population Polychlorinated biphenyl Sediment Biodegradation chemistry.chemical_compound Congener chemistry Environmental chemistry Reductive dechlorination Environmental Chemistry Degradation (geology) Organic chemistry Anaerobic bacteria education |
Zdroj: | Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 6:579-593 |
ISSN: | 1552-8618 0730-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1002/etc.5620060802 |
Popis: | The polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in sediment and/or fish samples from at least five different locations show changes in gas chromatographic (GC) peak distribution indicative of reductive dechlorination. Several different dechlorination processes, each presumably mediated by a different population of anaerobic bacteria with its own distinctive pattern of PCB congener selectivity, appear to be operating. Six of these processes have been characterized in detail as to the changes occurring in each of the 126 individual PCB congeners or isomer groups detectable by capillary GC or GC-MS on a DB-1 column. The patterns of congener reactivity indicate that the observed transformation processes fall into two broad categories: o,m,p-dechlorinations, which remove chlorine atoms from ortho, meta, and para positions, with congener reactivities primarily determined by reduction potential; and m,p-dechlorinations, which take chlorines from meta and para positions only, with relative reactivities determined mainly by molecular shape. Both types of dechlorination preferentially remove PCB congeners of toxicological concern, and both produce lower congeners that are biodegradable by environmental aerobes. Thus, dechlorination in anaerobic sediments permits the detoxification and eventual degradation of environmental PCBs. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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