Sorption to Black Carbon of Organic Compounds with Varying Polarity and Planarity
- 7 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Environmental Science & Technology
- Vol. 39 (10) , 3688-3694
- https://doi.org/10.1021/es048346n
Abstract
It is becoming increasingly clear that the products of incomplete combustion (soot and charcoal, collectively termed black carbon or BC) can be responsible for as much as 80−90% of the total sorption to sediments of aromatic, planar, and hydrophobic compounds such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or planar polychlorinated biphenyls. In the present study, it was investigated whether a nonpolar aliphatic compound (hexachloroethane) and three nonplanar bipolar compounds with different functional groups [free electron pairs but no aromatic ring (butylate) or free electron pairs and an aromatic ring (diuron, atrazine)] would also show strong and nonlinear sorption to a BC-enriched sediment. At a concentration of 1 ng/L, the extent of elevated BC sorption compared to total organic carbon (TOC) sorption increased in the order atrazine < hexachloroethane < butylate < diuron. Rationalization of the differences between the sorbates was attempted in terms of dispersive and steric effects. This study shows that the effects of strong BC sorption apply to a broader range of organic contaminants than previously thought, and the results will aid in a better understanding of BC sorption mechanisms and improved fate modeling of contaminants in the environment.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pesticide Adsorptivity of Aged Particulate Matter Arising from Crop Residue BurnsJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2003
- Removal of the Herbicide MCPA by Commercial Activated Carbons: Equilibrium, Kinetics, and ReversibilityIndustrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, 2003
- Binding of Atrazine to Humic Substances from Soil, Peat, and Coal Related to Their StructureEnvironmental Science & Technology, 2002
- A critical evaluation of interlaboratory data on total, elemental, and isotopic carbon in the carbonaceous particle reference material, NIST SRM 1649aJournal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, 2002
- Evaluation of a protocol for the quantification of black carbon in sedimentsGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 2001
- Isotherm nonlinearity and nonequilibrium sorption effects on transport of fenuron and monuron in soil columnsEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1995
- Thermodynamics of Organic Chemical Partition in Soils. 2. Nonlinear Partition of Substituted Phenylureas from Aqueous SolutionEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1994
- Desorption of tetrachloroethene and 1,2‐dibromo‐3‐chloropropane from aquifer sedimentsEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1991
- Desorptive behavior of trichloroethylene in contaminated soilEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1991
- Notes. Impact of fossil fuel combustion on sediments of Lake Michigan: a repriseEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1983