Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6329279 | Science of The Total Environment | 2014 | 8 Pages |
â¢For the first time, hydrophilic organic matter has been considered regarding Znâ¢Effluent organic matter shown high binding capacities and constants regarding Znâ¢Hydrophilic organic matter bound more zinc than natural humics and fulvicsâ¢Specific UV Absorbance is not the right indicator of Zn-DOM bindingâ¢BLM would need better indicator than SUVA to predict Zn bioavailability & toxicity
The zinc binding characteristics of dissolved organic matter (DOM) fractions from the Seine River Basin were studied after being separated and extracted according to their polarity: hydrophobic, transphilic, and hydrophilic. The applied experimental methodology was based on a determination of labile zinc species by means of differential pulse anodic stripping voltammetry (DPASV) at increasing concentrations of total zinc on a logarithmic scale and at fixed levels of: pH, ionic strength, and temperature. Fitting the DOM fractions with two discrete classes of ligands successfully allowed determining the conditional zinc binding constants (Ki) as well as total ligand density (LiT). The binding constants obtained for each DOM fraction were then compared and discussed with respect to the hydrophobic/hydrophilic nature and sample origin. Results highlighted a strong complexation of zinc to the effluent organic matter and especially the most hydrophilic fraction, which also displayed a very low specific UV absorbance. Although the biotic ligand model takes into account the quality of DOM through UV absorbance in the predictions of metal bioavailability and toxicity, this correction is not efficient for urban waters.
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