4.8 Article

Determination and Characterization of Oxy-Naphthenic Acids in Oilfield Wastewater

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 16, Pages 9545-9554

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es401850h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21177003]
  2. State High Technology Research and Development (863) Project of China [2012AA063401]

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Oxy-naphthenic acids (oxy-NM) are one of the major components of NA mixtures in wastewaters from petroleum industries. The limited available data indicated that oxy-NAs were considered as a potential marker for the degradation of NAs, and some oxy-NAs exhibited endocrine disrupting activities. However, the lack of information on the structures and occurrences of oxy-NAs in oilfield wastewaters limited the interpretations of the biotransformation pathways of NAs and structure-specific toxicity. A sensitive method for simultaneous determination of oxy-NAs together with NAs was developed by combining MAX extraction column and UPLC-ESI--QTOF-MS. The 2000-fold SPE preconcentration step was highly specific for acids and the prewash solvent greatly reduced matrix effects in the UPLC-ESI--QTOF-MS analysis, resulting in an increase in sensitivity down to detection limits in the ng/L range. To provide structural information within each oxy-NA isomer class, a new method was developed by derivatizing oxy-NAs with dansyl chloride by UPLC-ESI+-QTOF-MS. The molecular ion dansyl derivatives from the corresponding oxy-NAs and characteristic fragmentation ions, not detected before derivatization, were observed in the extracts of oilfield wastewater, providing evidence that O-3-NAs and O-4-NAs were mainly composed of OH-NAs and (OH)(2)-NAs, respectively. Semiquantification of oxy-NAs and NAs in various oilfield wastewaters revealed NAs, O-3-NAs, and O-4-NAs present at concentrations of 187-397, 44-146, and 40-108 mu g/L, respectively. Significantly different profiles of NA mixtures were observed in petroleum refinery wastewater and oil sands extraction water, but the profile of oxy-NAs was similar to NAs in different wastewaters suggesting the existence of biotransformation between NAs and oxy-NAs in the environment, and hydroxylation could be one of the major biotransformation pathways of NAs.

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