Photochemical fate of carbamazepine in surface freshwaters: Laboratory measures and modeling - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Environmental Science and Technology Année : 2012

Photochemical fate of carbamazepine in surface freshwaters: Laboratory measures and modeling

Résumé

It is shown here that carbamazepine (CBZ) would undergo direct photolysis and reaction with *OH as the main phototransformation pathways in surface waters. Environmental lifetimes are expected to vary from a few weeks to several months, and predictions are in good agreement with available field data. Acridine (I) and 10,11- dihydro-10,11-trans-dihydroxy-CBZ (V) are the main quantified phototransformation intermediates upon direct photolysis and *OH reaction, respectively. The photochemical yield of mutagenic I from CBZ is in the 3−3.5% range, and it is similar for both direct photolysis and *OH reaction: it would undergo limited variation with environmental conditions. In contrast, the yield of V would vary in the 4−8.5% range depending on the conditions, because V is formed from CBZ by *OH (9.0% yield) more effectively than upon direct photolysis (1.4% yield). Other important photointermediates, mostly formed from CBZ upon *OH reaction, are an aromatic-ringdihydroxylated CBZ (VI) and N,N-bis(2-carboxyphenyl)urea (VII). Compounds VI and VII are formed by photochemistry and are not reported as human metabolites; thus, they could be used as tracers of CBZ phototransformation in surface waters. Interestingly, VI has recently been detected in river water.

Dates et versions

hal-00786973 , version 1 (11-02-2013)

Identifiants

Citer

Elisa de Laurentiis, Serge Chiron, Sofia Kouras-Hadef, Claire Richard, Marco Minella, et al.. Photochemical fate of carbamazepine in surface freshwaters: Laboratory measures and modeling. Environmental Science and Technology, 2012, 46, pp.8164-8173. ⟨10.1021/es3015887⟩. ⟨hal-00786973⟩
159 Consultations
0 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More