Temperature and hydroxyl radical abundance limit the photochemical degradation kinetics and photoproducts of fluridone in high-latitude aquatic systems

02 September 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Temperature is often overlooked as an environmental driver of aquatic pollutant photodegradation kinetics; however, it may strongly impact contaminant persistence in polar climates characterized by low summertime temperatures and near-continuous sunlight. The photochemical degradation of fluridone (FLU), an herbicide applied worldwide to waterways for the eradication of invasive freshwater species, was investigated under simulated sub-arctic conditions typical of high-latitude surface waters. Temperature had a strong effect on the photochemical degradation of FLU, with half-lives for direct photochemical degradation ranging from approximately 40 h at 22 °C to 118 h at 9 °C under constant irradiation. Assessment of indirect processes involving reactive oxygen species indicated that FLU will primarily react with hydroxyl radicals (∙OH) and not singlet oxygen (1O2) produced by chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) in the environment. These results were corroborated by Fenton experiments, resulting in a calculated second order rate constant for the reaction with ∙OH of 8.37 x 109 M-1 s-1. Photoproduct identification revealed four main pathways for direct and indirect FLU photodegradation. Taken together, this work shows that direct photochemical degradation, which is dominant, is temperature dependent. Also, the interplay between light screening and ∙OH production of environmental CDOM, which is site dependent, will strongly influence FLU persistence.

Keywords

Hydroxyl radical
singlet oxygen
photolysis
photochemistry
transformation products
non-target analysis

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
Description
Chemical reagents. Photodegradation experiment details. 2NB actinometry rate constants. Quantitative methods for FLU, PhOH, and 2NB including MS/MS acquisition parameters. Description of solid phase extraction and identification of FLU photoproducts by UHPLC-Orbitrap non-target analysis. Tabulated absorptivity values for FLU. Tabulated rate constants for the degradation of FLU in experimental treatments. Activation energy, enthalpy of activation, and entropy of activation for the degradation of FLU.
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Supporting Information for Transformation Products
Description
Complete transformation pathway of FLU photochemical degradation intermediates/products. Tabulated summary of photoproducts identified. Compilation of UHPLC-Orbitrap chromatograms, MS2 spectra and fragmentation data, and chromatogram peak area vs time data for each photoproduct.
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