Jj. Pignatello et Yf. Sun, COMPLETE OXIDATION OF METOLACHLOR AND METHYL PARATHION IN WATER BY THE PHOTOASSISTED FENTON REACTION, Water research, 29(8), 1995, pp. 1837-1844
Metolachlor ethylphenyl)-N-(2-methoxy-1-methylethyl)acetamide] or meth
yl parathion [O,O-dimethyl-4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate] at (1-2) x
10(-4) M was rapidly decomposed using a photoassisted Fenton reaction
(Fe)(3+)/H2O2/u.v.). At 10(-2) M H2O2 and blacklight u.v. (300-400 nm)
comparable in intensity to midday summer sunlight, metolachlor reacte
d in 8 min and was completely mineralized to HCl (40 min), inorganic N
(7:1 ratio of NH3 and HNO3, > 2 h), and CO2 (6 h). The aromatic ring
was mineralized in 2.5 h. The transient organic intermediates identifi
ed-chloroacetate, oxalate, formate, serine, and several derivatives wi
th the aromatic ring intact-indicate non-selective attack on the molec
ule. Under the same conditions, methyl parathion reacted in 5 min givi
ng quantitative yields of HNO3 and H3SO4 (5 min) and H3PO4 (30 min). O
xalic acid, 4-nitrophenol, dimethyl phosphoric acid, and traces of O,O
-dimethyl-4-nitrophenyl phosphoric acid were identified as intermediat
es and shown to be oxidized further. Solutions of C-14-4-nitrophenol e
volved HNO3 concomitant with disappearance of starting material, and e
volved (CO2)-C-14 within 45 min. Based on the intermediates and their
yields the initial oxidant attack on methyl parathion appears to be on
the P=S group leading to elimination of 4-nitrophenol and dimethyl ph
osphate. The results suggest that photoassisted Fenton oxidation can b
e a mild and effective remedy for dilute pesticide wastes.