Title: Partitioning of contaminants in the environment
1Partitioning of contaminants in the environment
- Examples of interaction between different
environmental media (air, surface waters, soil)
encountered in contaminant transport analysis - Reflection off the ground in atmospheric
dispersion - Source/load terms from the atmosphere for surface
waters - Source/load terms from sediments in lakes
- Source/sink terms due to biota in rivers
- The distribution of a pollutant among different
phases at equilibrium is of interest because the
difference from this equilibrium value is the
driving force for inter-phase transport, thus
determining the ultimate fate of a pollutant
released into the environment.
2The unit world (Fig. 4.1 4.2 Samirullah)
- Air
- Water
- Suspended solids
- Sediment
- Soil
- Fish
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5Partitioning (equilibrium) coefficients
6Dimensional partitioning coefficients
- Henrys law constant, H
- Great care is required to ensure that the
constant has the appropriate units
7Dimensional partitioning coefficients
- Distribution coefficient in adsorption
8Partitioning coefficients
- Specific to the compound and the two phases
- Function of temperature
- Typically need to be determined experimentally
- Empirical relations may express coefficient in
terms of other easily measured properties
9Aquatic ecosystems
- Most organic compounds are lipophilic (lipid, or
fat loving) and hydrophobic (water hating) - Kfw (fish/water) 105 for things like PCB, DDT
- This is called bioconcentration
- If we drink 20 L water per week and eat 200 g
fish per week, mass consumption of water is 100
times mass consumption of fish - But, our exposure to contaminant from the fish
is 1000 times exposure from water!
10The octanol-water partitioning coefficient Kow
- A simple experiment gives Kow (Fig.5.2
Samirullah) - Kow can be used as a surrogate for the
lipid-water partitioning coefficient. - Most organics have low solubility in water, the
Coctanol vs Cwater relationship ends at the
solubility limit. - Kow may then be estimated as
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12Partitioning among multiple phases
- How does a mass M of pollutant distribute among
the 5 phases in figure 5.1 (Samirullah), Air,
water, fish, particles, sediment - Vi volume of phase i
- Ci concentration in phase I
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14Details of one phase
- Say fish contains 5 lipid
- Then 95 of Vfish contains almost no contaminant
- We should really re-adjust the fish-water
partitioning coefficient Kfw as follows
15Details of phases
- Say particles contain 20 organic carbon, and
sediment contains 5 organic carbon - We can define
- Koc can be expected to correlate with Kow and has
been suggested as Koc0.41 Kow
16 Partitioning of Naphtalene at 25 C
- C10H8 M128.19 (molecular weight)
- Water solubility 31 g/m3
- Vapour pressure 10.4 Pa
- Kow1580
17 Partitioning of Naphtalene at 25 C
18 Partitioning of 100 mols Naphtalene
19 Partitioning of 100 mols Naphtalene