| Literature DB >> 23972790 |
A Jelic1, I Michael, A Achilleos, E Hapeshi, D Lambropoulou, S Perez, M Petrovic, D Fatta-Kassinos, D Barcelo.
Abstract
This study examines the degradation of the antiepileptic carbamazepine (CBZ) by sonolysis, TiO2-based heterogeneous photocatalysis under UV-A and simulated solar irradiation, and by the combined use of UV-A and ultrasound irradiation (i.e. sonophotocatalysis) in demineralized water, ground water and effluent wastewater. The processes were compared with respect to substrate conversion rate and the extent of DOC reduction as a measure of mineralization. CBZ was degraded following a pseudo-first order kinetics. Sonophotocatalysis provided the highest rate of CBZ transformation over the time-course of the experiment while the degree of DOC removal in pure water was similar for all the studied treatments (around 40%), and always lower than CBZ conversion. This indicated that a considerable organic load remained in the treated solutions that could also be attributed to the presence of persistent oxidation products. UPLC-(+ESI)-QToF-MS was employed to determine major CBZ-related transformation products. Several recalcitrant hydroxy- and keto-derivatives of CBZ were tentatively identified. A Daphnia magna bioassay was used to evaluate the potential toxicity of the samples collected at different time points showing that the mixtures were highly toxic to D. magna.Entities:
Keywords: Carbamezapine; Mass spectrometry; Photocatalysis; Sonophotocatalysis; Toxicity; Transformation products
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23972790 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2013.07.068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588