Sorption of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to oil contaminated sediment: unresolved complex?

article
Oil is ubiquitous in aquatic sediments and may affect partitioning and bioavailability of hydrophobic organic chemicals (HOCs). In contrast to other sedimentary hydrophobic carbon phases (natural organic matter, soot-like materials), oil residues have hardly received any attention as far as it concerns effects on HOC sorption. This paper describes experimental work dealing with such effects of oil on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) sorption to sediments. Three different oils were spiked to a marine sediment in concentrations between 0 and 100 g/kg. Sediment—water distribution coefficients (Kd) for six deuterated PAHs were then determined either directly after spiking the oil or after a semi-natural weathering process in the lab (lasting for more than 2 yr). Resulting Kd values demonstrated sorption-reducing (competitive) effects at relatively low oil concentrations and sorption-enhancing effects at high oil concentrations. The letter effects only occurred above a certain threshold [i.e., ca. 15% (w/ w) of oil on a sedimentary organic carbon basis] marking the oil concentration at which the hydrocarbon mixture presumably starts forming separate phases. Assuming a two-domain (organic carbon + oil) distribution model, oil—water distribution coefficients (Kod) for PAHs were estimated. For fresh oils, log Ka values appeared to be very similar for different types of oils, proportional to log Kow values and indistinguishable from log Koc values. For weathered oils, K01 values were also rather independent of the type of oil, but the affinity of low molecular weight PAHs for weathered oil residues appeared to be extremely high, even higher than values reported for most types of soot. Because affinities of high molecular weight PAHs for oils had not changed upon weathering, sorption of all PAHs studied (comprising a log Kow range of 4.6-6.9) to the weathered oil residues appeared to be more or less constant (averaged log Ko,, = 7.0 + 0.24). These results demonstrate that it is crucial to take the presence of oil and its weathering state into account when assessing the actual fate of PAHs in aquatic environments
TNO Identifier
256808
Source
Environmental Science and Technology, 37(22), pp. 5197-5203.
Pages
5197-5203
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