VOLATILIZATION OF EXTENSIVELY DECHLORINATED POLYCHLORINATED-BIPHENYLSFROM HISTORICALLY CONTAMINATED SEDIMENTS

Citation
Sp. Bushart et al., VOLATILIZATION OF EXTENSIVELY DECHLORINATED POLYCHLORINATED-BIPHENYLSFROM HISTORICALLY CONTAMINATED SEDIMENTS, Environmental toxicology and chemistry, 17(10), 1998, pp. 1927-1933
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences",Toxicology,Chemistry
ISSN journal
07307268
Volume
17
Issue
10
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1927 - 1933
Database
ISI
SICI code
0730-7268(1998)17:10<1927:VOEDP>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
A study was conducted as a preliminary characterization of the ability of Aroclor(R) 1248 polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated sedime nts to volatilize PCBs into the air upon drying under conditions meant to be environmentally relevant. Sediments collected from the St. Lawr ence River contained high levels (similar to 600 ppm) of PCBs. The PCB contamination consisted of high levels of mainly ortho-substituted mo no- and dichlorobiphenyls, suggesting that the original contamination had been transformed by microbial reductive dechlorination. These sedi ments lost 0.07 to 1.7% of their total PCB content to the air during a 24-h drying cycle. Sediments with varying amounts of overlying water (40 g of sediment with 25-100 ml of water) lost significantly less PCB to the air within the first few cycles than native sediments with no overlying water. Losses due to PCB volatilization were well correlated to sediment PCB concentration and water loss but not to drying temper atures (4-43 degrees C) within 24-h drying cycles. The PCB congeners ( mostly ortho-substituted mono-, di-, and trichlorobiphenyls) represent ing >90% of those volatilized within the first 24 h of drying were tho se produced in the sediment samples as a result of microbial reductive dechlorination of the original Aroclor 1248 contamination. The presen ce of these congeners in volatilized air samples was positively confir med by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry with Fourier transform inf rared detection (FTIR). These results strongly suggest that significan t amounts of mono-, di-, and trichlorobiphenyls may be volatilized fro m Aroclor 1248-contaminated sediments at ambient environmental conditi ons and that this PCB volatilization may be enhanced by microbial redu ctive dechlorination.