Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4414075 Chemosphere 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Polyoxymethylene (POM) is a polymeric material used increasingly in passive sampling of hydrophobic organic contaminants such as PAHs and PCBs in soils and sediments. In this study, we examined the sorption behavior of 12 PAH compounds to POM and observed linear isotherms spanning two orders of magnitude of aqueous concentrations. Uptake kinetic studies performed in batch systems for up to 54 d with two different volume ratios of POM-to-aqueous phase were evaluated with coupled diffusion and mass transfer models to simulate the movement of PAHs during the uptake process and to assess the physicochemical properties and experimental conditions that control uptake rates. Diffusion coefficients of PAHs in POM were estimated to be well correlated with diffusants’ molecular weights as DPOM∝(MW)-3DPOM∝(MW)-3, descending from 2.3 × 10−10 cm2 s−1 for naphthalene to 7.0 × 10−11 cm2 s−1 for pyrene. The uptake rates for PAHs with log Kow < 5.8 were controlled by the POM phase and the hydrophobicity of PAH compounds. For more hydrophobic PAH compounds, the aqueous boundary layer played an increasingly important role in determining the overall mass transfer rate. The POM partitioning technique was demonstrated to agree well with two other procedures for measuring PAH soil–water distribution coefficients in oil-soot (lampblack) containing soil samples.

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