A model assessment of the ability of lake water in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica, to induce the photochemical degradation of emerging contaminants
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
The shallow lakes located in Terra Nova Bay, Antarctica, are free from ice for only up to a couple of
months (mid December to early/mid February) during the austral summer. In the rest of the year, the ice
cover shields the light and inhibits the photochemical processes in the water columns. Previous work has
shown that chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in these lakes is very reactive photochemically.
A model assessment is here provided of lake-water photoreactivity in field conditions, based
on experimental data of lake water absorption spectra, chemistry and photochemistry obtained previously,
taking into account the water depth and the irradiation conditions of the Antarctic summer. The
chosen sample contaminants were the solar filter benzophenone-3 and the antimicrobial agent triclosan,
which have very well known photoreactivity and have been found in a variety of environmental matrices
in the Antarctic continent. The two compounds would have a half-life time of just a few days or less in
the lake water during the Antarctic summertime, largely due to reaction with CDOM triplet states
(3CDOM*). In general, pollutants that occur in the ice and could be released to lake water upon ice
melting (around or soon after the December solstice) would be quickly photodegraded if they undergo
fast reaction with 3CDOM*. With some compounds, the important 3CDOM* reactions might favour the production of harmful secondary pollutants, such as 2,8-dichlorodibenzodioxin from the basic (anionic)
form of triclosan.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
Minella, Marco; Maurino, Valter; Minero, Claudio; Vione, Davide
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