| Literature DB >> 27775891 |
Deb P Jaisi1, Hui Li1, Adam F Wallace2, Prajwal Paudel1, Mingjing Sun1, Avula Balakrishna1, Robert N Lerch3.
Abstract
Degradation of glyphosate in the presence of manganese oxide and UV light was analyzed using phosphate oxygen isotope ratios and density function theory (DFT). The preference of C-P or C-N bond cleavage was found to vary with changing glyphosate/manganese oxide ratios, indicating the potential role of sorption-induced conformational changes on the composition of intermediate degradation products. Isotope data confirmed that one oxygen atom derived solely from water was incorporated into the released phosphate during glyphosate degradation, and this might suggest similar nucleophilic substitution at P centers and C-P bond cleavage both in manganese oxide- and UV light-mediated degradation. The DFT results reveal that the C-P bond could be cleaved by water, OH- or •OH, with the energy barrier opposing bond dissociation being lowest in the presence of the radical species, and that C-N bond cleavage is favored by the formation of both nitrogen- and carbon-centered radicals. Overall, these results highlight the factors controlling the dominance of C-P or C-N bond cleavage that determines the composition of intermediate/final products and ultimately the degradation pathway.Entities:
Keywords: C−P and C−N bond cleavage; DFT; degradation; glyphosate; manganese oxide; phosphate isotopes
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27775891 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b02608
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279