Assessment of N‑Oxide Formation during Wastewater Ozonation

Worldwide, ozonation of secondary wastewater effluents is increasingly considered in order to decrease the load of organic contaminants before environmental discharge. However, despite the constantly growing knowledge of ozonation over the past few years, the characterization of transformation produ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2017-01, Vol.51 (1), p.410-417
Hauptverfasser: Merel, Sylvain, Lege, Sascha, Yanez Heras, Jorge E, Zwiener, Christian
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container_issue 1
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container_title Environmental science & technology
container_volume 51
creator Merel, Sylvain
Lege, Sascha
Yanez Heras, Jorge E
Zwiener, Christian
description Worldwide, ozonation of secondary wastewater effluents is increasingly considered in order to decrease the load of organic contaminants before environmental discharge. However, despite the constantly growing knowledge of ozonation over the past few years, the characterization of transformation products (TPs) is still a major concern, particularly because such TPs might remain biologically active. It has been shown for selected tertiary amine pharmaceuticals that they react with ozone and form the corresponding N-oxides. This study therefore applies liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) to assess the overall N-oxide formation during the pilot-scale ozonation of a secondary wastewater effluent from a major city in Germany. Sample analysis by LC-HRMS revealed the occurrence of 1,229 compounds, among which 853 were precursors attenuated by ozone and 165 were TPs. Further examination of precursors and TPs using Kendrick mass and Kendrick mass defect analysis revealed 34 pairs of precursors and products corresponding to a mono-oxygenation. Among these, 27 pairs (16% of all TPs) were consistent with N-oxides since the TP had a higher retention time than the precursor, a characteristic of these compounds. Using high resolution tandem mass spectrometry, 10 of these N-oxides could be identified and were shown to be stable during a subsequent filtration step.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.est.6b02373
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subjects Analytical chemistry
Chemical compounds
Chemical Sciences
Chromatography
Discharge
Effluents
Environmental Engineering
Environmental Sciences
Mass spectrometry
Organic Chemicals
Organic contaminants
Oxides
Ozone - chemistry
Scientific imaging
Waste Disposal, Fluid
Waste Water - chemistry
Water Pollutants, Chemical
title Assessment of N‑Oxide Formation during Wastewater Ozonation
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