Production of macromolecular chloramines by chlorine-transfer reactions

被引:17
作者
Bedner, M
MacCrehan, WA
Helz, GR [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Dept Chem & Biochem, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[2] NIST, Div Analyt Chem, Gaithersburg, MD 20899 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/es035064z
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Chlorination of treated wastewaters is undertaken to prevent dispersal of human pathogens into the environment. Except in well-nitrified effluents, the primary agents in chlorination, Cl-2(g) or NaOCl(aq), are short-lived and quickly transfer oxidative chlorine to secondary agents (N-chloramines), which then participate in the disinfection process. Maturation of residual chlorine resulting from chlorine-transfer reactions is still poorly characterized. Using gel permeation and reversed-phase liquid chromatography combined with a novel, oxidant-specific detector, unanticipated trends during the maturation of residual chlorine in wastewater are identified. Within 2 min after addition of NaOCl, and continuing for several hours at least, significant amounts of oxidative chlorine are transferred to secondary agents that are moderately to strongly hydrophobic and to agents that have high relative molecular masses(M-r 1300-25000). It is hypothesized that hydrophobic stabilization of organic chloramines (RNHCldegrees) thermodynamically drives these transfers, making macromolecular chloramines the ultimate oxidative chlorine carriers. Macromolecular chloramines are expected to be sluggish oxidants, as observed in their reduction by sulfite, and are expected to be poor disinfectants. If transfer of oxidative chlorine to high M-r components occurs widely at treatment plants,then this phenomenon offers a new, physicochemical explanation for the well-known impotency of organic chloramines in wastewater disinfection.
引用
收藏
页码:1753 / 1758
页数:6
相关论文
共 61 条
[51]   Chlorination of pure bacterial cultures in aqueous solution [J].
Shang, C ;
Blatcheley, ER .
WATER RESEARCH, 2001, 35 (01) :244-254
[52]  
SHURTER LM, 1995, ENRIRON SCI TECHNOL, V29, P1127
[53]   MECHANISM OF THE BACTERICIDAL ACTION OF MYELOPEROXIDASE - INCREASED PERMEABILITY OF THE ESCHERICHIA-COLI CELL-ENVELOPE [J].
SIPS, HJ ;
HAMERS, MN .
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 1981, 31 (01) :11-16
[54]   KINETICS OF CHLORINE TRANSFER FROM CHLORAMINE TO AMINES, AMINO-ACIDS, AND PEPTIDES [J].
SNYDER, MP ;
MARGERUM, DW .
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 1982, 21 (07) :2545-2550
[55]   MECHANISM OF DISINFECTION - EFFECT OF CHLORINE ON CELL-MEMBRANE FUNCTIONS [J].
VENKOBACHAR, C ;
IYENGAR, L ;
RAO, AVSP .
WATER RESEARCH, 1977, 11 (08) :727-729
[56]   Effect of natural organic matter on monochloramine decomposition: Pathway elucidation through the use of mass and redox balances [J].
Vikesland, PJ ;
Ozekin, K ;
Valentine, RL .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1998, 32 (10) :1409-1416
[57]  
White G.C., 1999, The Handbook of Chlorination and Alternative Disinfectants
[58]   NONMETAL REDOX KINETICS - GENERAL-ACID-ASSISTED REACTIONS OF CHLORAMINE WITH SULFITE AND HYDROGEN SULFITE [J].
YIIN, BS ;
WALKER, DM ;
MARGERUM, DW .
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, 1987, 26 (21) :3435-3441
[59]  
YIIN BS, 1988, INORG CHEM, V27, P1672
[60]   CHLORINE TRANSFER FROM INORGANIC MONOCHLORAMINE IN CHLORINATED WASTE-WATER [J].
YOON, J ;
JENSEN, JN .
WATER ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH, 1995, 67 (05) :842-847