Issue 10, 2019

A streamlined workflow to study direct photodegradation kinetic and transformation products for persistence assessment of a fragrance ingredient in natural waters

Abstract

Photodegradation can be an important abiotic degradation process to consider for the fate and persistence assessment of chemical substances in the environment. In this work, using a fragrance ingredient (FI, (E)-4-(2,2,3,6-tetramethylcyclohexyl)but-3-en-2-one) as an example, we developed a streamlined workflow to investigate direct photodegradation of chemicals in the aquatic environment, including laboratory investigation of kinetics and transformation products and estimation of its aquatic environmental half-lives. Direct photodegradation was determined to be the dominant photodegradation process for FI with a quantum yield of 0.25, which was supported by photodegradation experiments conducted in natural sunlight. Accounting for light attenuation by dissolved organic matter in natural waters of different depths resulted in aquatic half-lives of <31 days even at polar latitudes. Photoisomerization was shown to be a major photodegradation pathway along with the formation and subsequent degradation of constitutional isomers and photooxidation products. These results contributed to FI being assessed as non-persistent in the environment.

Graphical abstract: A streamlined workflow to study direct photodegradation kinetic and transformation products for persistence assessment of a fragrance ingredient in natural waters

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Jun 2019
Accepted
02 Oct 2019
First published
04 Oct 2019

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2019,21, 1713-1721

A streamlined workflow to study direct photodegradation kinetic and transformation products for persistence assessment of a fragrance ingredient in natural waters

J. Lin, J. N. Apell, K. McNeill, M. Emberger, V. Ciraulo and S. Gimeno, Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2019, 21, 1713 DOI: 10.1039/C9EM00300B

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