Measuring the biodegradability of nonylphenol ether carboxylates, octylphenol ether carboxylates, and nonylphenol
We examined the biodegradability of several metabolites of C8- and C9-alkylphenol ethoxylates, including nonylphenoxyacetic acid (NPEC 1), nonylphenoxyethoxyacetic acid (NPEC2), octylphenoxyacetic acid (OPEC 1), octylphenoxyethoxyacetic acid (OPEC2), and nonylphenol (NP). Using OECD method 30113 (mo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chemosphere (Oxford) 1999-04, Vol.38 (9), p.2029-2039 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We examined the biodegradability of several metabolites of C8- and C9-alkylphenol ethoxylates, including nonylphenoxyacetic acid (NPEC 1), nonylphenoxyethoxyacetic acid (NPEC2), octylphenoxyacetic acid (OPEC 1), octylphenoxyethoxyacetic acid (OPEC2), and nonylphenol (NP). Using OECD method 30113 (modified Sturm method), OPEC 1 and OPEC2 are readily biodegradable: both compounds exceeded 60% of theoretical CO
2 formation (ThCO
2) by day 28, and required less than 10 days to go from 10% to 60% ThCO
2. Also using method 30113, NPEC1 and NPEC2 exceeded 60% ThCO
2 at day 28, but did not meet the 10 day window. Using OECD method 301F, the manometric respirometry method that measures oxygen consumption, approximately 62% of NP was biodegraded in 28 days, but required more than 10 days to go from 10% to 60% biodegradation. While the validity of the “10-day window” is currently being debated within OECD, the data show that the common metabolites of C8- and C9- APEs are rapidly degraded in the test systems used, which strongly suggests that they would not accumulate or persist in the environment. |
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ISSN: | 0045-6535 1879-1298 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0045-6535(98)00415-9 |