Title of article :
Determination of Henryʹs law constants of organochlorine pesticides in deionized and saline water as a function of temperature
Author/Authors :
Banu Cetin، نويسنده , , Serdar Ozer، نويسنده , , Aysun Sofuoglu، نويسنده , , Mustafa Odabasi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
9
From page :
4538
To page :
4546
Abstract :
The Henryʹs law constant (H) is an important parameter that is required to estimate the air–water exchange of semi-volatile organic compounds. Henryʹs law constants for 17 banned/restricted/currently used organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) were experimentally determined using a gas-stripping technique in deionized and saline water (3%) over a temperature range of 5–35 °C. H values (at 25 °C) ranged between 0.066±0.037 Pa m3 mol−1 (endosulfan II) and 62.0±24.2 Pa m3 mol−1 (heptachlor) in deionized water while the range in saline water was 0.28±0.03 Pa m3 mol−1 (γ-HCH) and 135.2±31.3 Pa m3 mol−1 (heptachlor). The increase in dimensionless Henryʹs law constants (H′) for OCPs over the studied temperature range was between 3 (γ-HCH)-19 times (chlorpyrifos) and 3 (endosulfan II)-80 times (trans-nonachlor) in deionized and saline water, respectively. The calculated enthalpies of phase change (ΔHH) were within the ranges previously reported for OCPs and other organic compounds (23.8–100.2 kJ mol−1). The salting-out constant, ks, ranged between 0.04 (γ-HCH) and 1.80 L mol−1 (endosulfan II) indicating the importance of assessing the H values of OCPs in saline water to accurately determine their partitioning and fate in seawater.
Keywords :
Salting-out effect , Organochlorine pesticides , Gas-stripping technique , Henry’s law constant
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Record number :
759639
Link To Document :
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