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1.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 31(30): 43432-43450, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38862805

ABSTRACT

The progress in chemical analytics and understanding of pesticide dynamics in surface waters allows establishing robust data on compounds with frequent exceedances of quality standards. The current chemical, temporal, and spatial coverage of the pesticide monitoring campaigns differs strongly between European countries. A questionnaire revealed differences in monitoring strategies in seven selected European countries; Nordic countries prioritize temporal coverage, while others focus on spatial coverage. Chemical coverage has increased, especially for non-polar classes like synthetic pyrethroids. Sweden combines monitoring data with agricultural practices for derived quantities, while the Netherlands emphasizes spatial coverage to trace contamination sources. None of the EU member states currently has established a process for linking chemical surface water monitoring data with regulatory risk assessment, while Switzerland has recently established a legally defined feedback loop. Due to their design and objectives, most strategies do not capture concentration peaks, especially 2-week composite samples, but also grab samples. Nevertheless, for substances that appear problematic in many data sets, the need for action is evident even without harmonization of monitoring programs. Harmonization would be beneficial, however, for cross-national assessment including risk reduction measures.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Pesticides , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Pesticides/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Europe , Risk Assessment
2.
Water Res ; 201: 117262, 2021 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34118650

ABSTRACT

Despite elaborate regulation of agricultural pesticides, their occurrence in non-target areas has been linked to adverse ecological effects on insects in several field investigations. Their quantitative role in contributing to the biodiversity crisis is, however, still not known. In a large-scale study across 101 sites of small lowland streams in Central Europe, Germany we revealed that 83% of agricultural streams did not meet the pesticide-related ecological targets. For the first time we identified that agricultural nonpoint-source pesticide pollution was the major driver in reducing vulnerable insect populations in aquatic invertebrate communities, exceeding the relevance of other anthropogenic stressors such as poor hydro-morphological structure and nutrients. We identified that the current authorisation of pesticides, which aims to prevent unacceptable adverse effects, underestimates the actual ecological risk as (i) measured pesticide concentrations exceeded current regulatory acceptable concentrations in 81% of the agricultural streams investigated, (ii) for several pesticides the inertia of the authorisation process impedes the incorporation of new scientific knowledge and (iii) existing thresholds of invertebrate toxicity drivers are not protective by a factor of 5.3 to 40. To provide adequate environmental quality objectives, the authorisation process needs to include monitoring-derived information on pesticide effects at the ecosystem level. Here, we derive such thresholds that ensure a protection of the invertebrate stream community.


Subject(s)
Pesticides , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Agriculture , Animals , Ecosystem , Environmental Monitoring , Europe , Germany , Insecta , Invertebrates , Pesticides/analysis , Rivers , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity
3.
Isotopes Environ Health Stud ; 53(2): 116-133, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27686404

ABSTRACT

In this study conversion conditions for oxygen gas chromatography high temperature conversion (HTC) isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS) are characterised using qualitative mass spectrometry (IonTrap). It is shown that physical and chemical properties of a given reactor design impact HTC and thus the ability to accurately measure oxygen isotope ratios. Commercially available and custom-built tube-in-tube reactors were used to elucidate (i) by-product formation (carbon dioxide, water, small organic molecules), (ii) 2nd sources of oxygen (leakage, metal oxides, ceramic material), and (iii) required reactor conditions (conditioning, reduction, stability). The suitability of the available HTC approach for compound-specific isotope analysis of oxygen in volatile organic molecules like methyl tert-butyl ether is assessed. Main problems impeding accurate analysis are non-quantitative HTC and significant carbon dioxide by-product formation. An evaluation strategy combining mass spectrometric analysis of HTC products and IRMS 18O/16O monitoring for future method development is proposed.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring/methods , Hot Temperature , Environmental Monitoring/instrumentation , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Methyl Ethers/analysis , Oxygen Isotopes/analysis
4.
Anal Chem ; 87(18): 9443-50, 2015 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26291200

ABSTRACT

The traditional high-temperature conversion (HTC) approach toward compound-specific stable isotope analysis (CSIA) of hydrogen for heteroatom-bearing (i.e., N, Cl, S) compounds has been afflicted by fractionation bias due to formation of byproducts HCN, HCl, and H2S. This study presents a chromium-based high-temperature conversion (Cr/HTC) approach for organic compounds containing nitrogen, chlorine, and sulfur. Following peak separation along a gas chromatographic (GC) column, the use of thermally stable ceramic Cr/HTC reactors at 1100-1500 °C and chemical sequestration of N, Cl, and S by chromium result in quantitative conversion of compound-specific organic hydrogen to H2 analyte gas. The overall hydrogen isotope analysis via GC-Cr/HTC-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS) achieved a precision of better than ± 5 mUr along the VSMOW-SLAP scale. The accuracy of GC-Cr/HTC-IRMS was validated with organic reference materials (RM) in comparison with online EA-Cr/HTC-IRMS and offline dual-inlet IRMS. The utility and reliability of the GC-Cr/HTC-IRMS system were documented during the routine measurement of more than 500 heteroatom-bearing organic samples spanning a δ(2)H range of -181 mUr to 629 mUr.


Subject(s)
Chromium/chemistry , Deuterium/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Temperature
5.
Anal Chem ; 87(5): 2832-9, 2015 Mar 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25647449

ABSTRACT

A universal application of compound-specific isotope analysis of chlorine was thus far limited by the availability of suitable analysis techniques. In this study, gas chromatography in combination with a high-temperature conversion interface (GC-HTC), converting organic chlorine in the presence of H2 to gaseous HCl, was coupled to a dual-detection system, combining an ion trap mass spectrometer (MS) and isotope-ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS). The combination of the MS/IRMS detection enabled a detailed characterization, optimization, and online monitoring of the high-temperature conversion process via ion trap MS as well as a simultaneous chlorine isotope analysis by the IRMS. Using GC-HTC-MS/IRMS, chlorine isotope analysis at optimized conversion conditions resulted in very accurate isotope values (δ(37)Cl(SMOC)) for measured reference material with known isotope composition, including chlorinated ethylene, chloromethane, hexachlorocyclohexane, and trichloroacetic acids methyl ester. Respective detection limits were determined to be <15 nmol Cl on column with achieved precision of <0.3‰.


Subject(s)
Chlorine/analysis , Ethylenes/analysis , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Hexachlorocyclohexane/analysis , Isotope Labeling/methods , Methyl Chloride/analysis , Trichloroacetic Acid/analysis
6.
Water Res ; 71: 187-96, 2015 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25617603

ABSTRACT

The applicability of compound-specific stable carbon isotope analysis (CSIA) for assessing biodegradation of hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) isomers was investigated in a contaminated aquifer at a former pesticide processing facility. A CSIA method was developed and tested for efficacy in determining carbon isotope ratios of HCH isomers in groundwater samples using gas chromatography - isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC-IRMS). The carbon isotope ratios of HCHs measured for samples taken from the field site confirmed contaminant source zones at former processing facilities, a storage depot and a waste dump site. The (13)C-enrichment in HCHs provided evidence for biodegradation of HCHs especially downstream of the contaminant source zones. CSIA from monitoring campaigns in 2008, 2009 and 2010 revealed temporal trends in HCH biodegradation. Thus, the impact and progress of natural attenuation processes could be evaluated within the investigated aquifer. Calculations based on the Rayleigh-equation approach yielded levels of HCH biodegradation ranging from 30 to 86 %. Moreover, time- and distance-dependent in situ first-order biodegradation rate constants were estimated with maximal values of 3 × 10(-3) d(-1) and 10 × 10(-3) m(-1) for α-HCH, 11 × 10(-3) d(-1) and 37 × 10(-3) m(-1) for ß-HCH, and 6 × 10(-3) d(-1) and 19 × 10(-3) m(-1) for δ-HCH, respectively. This study highlights the applicability of CSIA for the assessment of HCH biodegradation within contaminated aquifers.


Subject(s)
Groundwater/chemistry , Hexachlorocyclohexane/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Biodegradation, Environmental , Carbon Isotopes , Environmental Monitoring , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Isomerism
7.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 25(20): 3114-22, 2011 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21953967

ABSTRACT

A novel approach for the measurement of (37)Cl, (81)Br and (34)S in organic compounds containing chlorine, bromine, and sulphur is presented to overcome some of the major drawbacks of existing methods. Contemporary methods either require reference materials with the exact molecular compositions of the substances to be tested, or necessitate several laborious offline procedures prior to isotope analysis. In our online setup, organic compounds are separated by gas chromatography (GC) coupled to a high-temperature reactor. Using hydrogen as a makeup gas, the reactor achieves quantitative conversion of chlorinated, brominated and sulphurated organic compounds into gaseous hydrogen chloride (HCl), hydrogen bromide (HBr), and hydrogen sulphide (H(2)S), respectively. In this study, the GC interface was coupled to a quadrupole mass spectrometer operated in single-ion mode. The ion traces of either H(35)Cl (m/z 36) and H(37)Cl (m/z 38), H(79)Br (m/z 80) and H(81)Br (m/z 82), or H(2)(32)S (m/z 34) and H(2)(34)S (m/z 36), were recorded to determine the isotopic ratios of chlorine, bromine, and sulphur isotopes. The conversion interface presented here provides a basis for a novel method for compound-specific isotope analysis of halogenated and sulphur-containing compounds. Rapid online measurements of organic chlorine-, bromine- and sulphur-containing mixtures will facilitate the isotopic analysis of compounds containing these elements, and broaden their usage in fields of environmental forensics employing isotopic concepts.


Subject(s)
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Hydrobromic Acid/analysis , Hydrochloric Acid/analysis , Hydrogen Sulfide/analysis , Organic Chemicals/chemistry , Hot Temperature , Hydrogen , Isotopes/analysis
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