کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5746833 | 1618795 | 2017 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Kinetic study on 30 APIs in waters during 28 days of UV irradiation.
- The major removal process was indirect phototransformation.
- The kinetics in natural waters highly depended on the water chemistry.
- Long-term UV-exposure enabled environmental relevant removal kinetics.
- High stability of many APIs studied concerns and emphasizes need for further research.
This study investigated the i) kinetics, and ii) proportion of photolysis of 30 relatively stable active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) during artificial UV irradiation for 28Â d in ammonium acetate buffer, filtered and unfiltered river water. Buffer was included to control removal kinetics under stable pH conditions and without particulate matter. Dark controls were used to determine removal due to other processes than photolysis and calculate the proportion of photolysis of the total removal. The removal of each API in each matrix was determined using online solid phase extraction/liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (online SPE/LC-MS/MS). Most APIs transformed during the 28Â d of UV irradiation and the dark controls showed that photolysis was the major removal process for the majority of the APIs studied. The half-lives ranged from 6Â h (amitriptyline) in unfiltered river water to 884Â h (37Â d, carbamazepine) in buffer. In unfiltered river water, the proportion of APIs with short half-lives (<48Â h) was much higher (29%) than in the other matrices (4%), probably due to additional organic carbon, which could have promoted indirect photolysis. Furthermore, two APIs, memantine and fluconazole, were stable in all three matrices, while alprazolam was stable in buffer and unfiltered river water and four additional APIs were stable in buffer. Considering the relatively long-term UV-exposure, this study enabled the investigation of environmentally relevant half-lives in natural waters. Many APIs showed high persistence, which is environmentally concerning and emphasizes the importance of further studies on their environmental fate and effects.
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Journal: Chemosphere - Volume 176, June 2017, Pages 175-182