Title: New Term Paper Due Dates
1New Term Paper Due Dates
November 18 final version of paper for peer
editing. December 2 return edited papers to
classmates. December 9 Final edited paper due.
2Persistent Organics in the Environment
- Some common persistent organics
- DDT
- PCBs
- Dioxins
- PBDE
- MTBE
3Persistent Organics in the Environment
- Why are we concerned?
- Bioaccumulation
- Stability
- Toxicity
4Persistent Organics in the Environment
1. Bioaccumulation Due to their low solubility,
persistent organics tend to partition to soils
and animal fats. This partitioning can be
modeled to within about a factor of 10 using
octanol (C8H17OH).
5Persistent Organics in the Environment
1. Bioaccumulation
6Persistent Organics in the Environment
1. Bioaccumulation This is usually reported as
the logKow because the values for molecules of
interest can be quite large. Online
database http//logkow.cisti.nrc.ca/logkow/index.
jsp
7Persistent Organics in the Environment
1. Bioaccumulation
Do to the stability and partitioning of organics
in fatty tissue, the concentration of organics
may magnify many orders of magnitude through
several trophic levels.
From www.absc.usgs.gov
8Persistent Organics in the Environment
2. Stability Low volatility no gas phase
sink. Low solubility not very mobile. Usually
consist of chlorine or bromine bonded to an
aromatic ring not very reactive. Long lifetime
can be transported long distances over time.
9Persistent Organics in the Environment
2. Stability
From Thomann, Environmental Health Perspectives
Volume 103, Supplement 5, June 1995
10Persistent Organics in the Environment
- 3. Toxicity
- exposure
- acute versus chronic toxicity
- mode of toxicity
- mutagen
- carcinogen
- teratogen
- dose-response relationship
11Persistent Organics in the Environment
- 3. Toxicity
- Exposure depends on Kow.
From Thomann, Environmental Health Perspectives
Volume 103, Supplement 5, June 1995
12Persistent Organics in the Environment
3. Toxicity
Dose is usually expressed as a mass of chemical
per mass of organism. Response is usually
expressed as the of the population that has a
specific response (or dies) after exposure to the
corresponding dose.
From www.rstp.uwaterloo.ca
13Persistent Organics in the Environment
- 3. Toxicity
- Major health concerns
- Chronic
- hormone disruption
- cancer development
- birth defects
- Acute
- all of the above
- allergic reaction
- respiratory issues
14para-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)
- Used to control typhus and malaria during WWII.
- Used as an agricultural pesticide since WWII.
- 1.8 million metric tonnes released to the
environment worldwide. - Banned in the US in 1972 and subsequently
worldwide. - Still used today in the tropics to control
mosquitoes that carry malaria.
DDT log Kow 6.2
15para-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)
DDT
DDE
- DDE (dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane) is a major
derivative of DDT and is responsible for much of
both the effectiveness of DDT and its
harmfulness.
16para-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)
- Kills bugs by interfering with their neurological
activity. - Causes thinning of shells in predatory birds.
- Low acute toxicity for humans (LD 50 113mg/kg)
DDT
17para-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)
log Kow 6.91
From www.geo.arizona.edu
18para-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)
From National Resources Defense Council
19Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCBs)
209 individual compounds, about 130 were commonly
used.
20Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
- Industrial production began in 1929
- Approximately 1.5 million metric tonnes have been
produced globally. - Production peaked in the 1960s.
- Mostly banned in the 1970s for open uses.
- No new production today, however, some PCBs are
still in use. - insulating fluid for transformers and capacitors
- plasticizer
- fire retardant
21Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
- Properties
- Low water solubility
- High organic solubility
- Generally low vapor pressures
- Chemically stable
- log Kow 5.2 (4,4-dichlorobiphenol)
- Acute toxicity for humans
- grams/kg
- For fish
- µg/kg
22Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
- Removal from the environment involves
- dispersion slow due to bioaccumulation
- chemical breakdown slow due to stability
- removal of contaminated soils or sediments must
then store the contaminated material - incineration potential to create other
hazardous materials furans and dioxins - microbial conversion to Cl2 and biphenyl
23Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
- Hudson River PCBs
- General Electric dumped up to 1.3 million lbs of
PCB into the Hudson river between 1947 and 1977. - Dredging to remove contaminated sediments began
earlier this year (2009).
From www.riverkeeper.org
24Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
From New York State Dept of Environmental
Conservation
25Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
USEPA suggests a maximum safe level for
consumption is 3 ppm in dairy, meat, and seafood.
From National Resources Defense Council
26Dioxin
- Sources
- Natural is created anytime organic material is
burned in the presence of chlorine. - Industrial is created anytime organic material
is burned in the presence of chlorine. - incineration
- pulp and paper bleaching
- Mostly a by-product of other processes, however
has been used directly. - defoliant Agent Orange
- poison
27Dioxin
chloracne
Viktor Yushchenko, president of Ukraine, was
allegedly poisoned with dioxin and had dioxin
levels thousands of times greater than found in
average blood.
28Dioxin
Toxicity LD50 100s of µg/kg for the most
toxic form.
2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin (TCDD)
29Dioxin
From Natural Resources Defense Council
30Dioxin
log Kow 6.8 (TCDD)
From Natural Resources Defense Council
31Polybrominated diphenyl ethers(PBDE)
- Flame retardant
- Integrated into many consumer products including
plastics and fabrics. - Still produced in the US, recently banned in
California, Washington, and Maine. Banned in the
European Union. - LD50 is grams/kg
- log Kow 5.8
32Polybrominated diphenyl ethers(PBDE)
From Natural Resources Defense Council
33Polybrominated diphenyl ethers(PBDE)
From Natural Resources Defense Council
34Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE)
- Fuel additive
- Increases octane number.
- Reduces engine knocking replaced lead
- Reduces VOC emissions from gasoline.
- LD50 4g/kg (comparable to pure ethanol)
- log Kow 0.94
35Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE)
Seeps into groundwater from underground fuel
storage tanks. -gives water an unpleasant taste
at 5µg/L Has been measured in well water around
Santa Monica and Lake Tahoe -California now has
regulations for MTBE (5µg/L)
36Next Weeks Exam
- The exam is on Wednesday, November 4 during the
first 50 minutes of regular class time. - You are allowed to use a calculator (no PDAs or
cell phone calculators). - You may not use your calculator to look at
pre-recorded notes this is considered cheating. - Dont forget your calculator, there will be no
extras to hand out.
37Next Weeks Exam
- No aids in addition to a calculator are allowed.
- Do everything possible to avoid even the
suggestion of cheating - no hats, sunglasses, wandering eyes, etc.
- Partial credit can be given only if your work is
well organized and easily readable. - All calculations need to be worked out on the
exam to receive credit, even if you have the
correct answer.
38Next Weeks Exam
- The form of the exam
- Multiple choice
- 20-30
- Short answer
- 30-40
- Worked out calculations
- 30-40
- This exam is worth 22 of your grade.
39Next Weeks Exam
- Priority of material on the exam
- Topics covered in lecture
- Topics covered by the assigned reading
- You are responsible for material in the readings,
even if it was not explicitly covered in lecture. - Preparing for the exam
- Do the suggested problems
- Study the lecture notes
- Study text