1,10-Dichlorodecane (D(2)C(10)) is shown to be effectively photodegraded in aqueous suspensions of TiO(2) using a photoreactor equipped with 300 nm lamps. Solutions exposed to UV light intensities of 3.6 x 10(-5) Ein L(-1) min(-1), established by ferrioxalate actinometry, showed negligible direct photolysis in the absence of TiO(2). The degradation rate was optimal with 150 mg/L of TiO(2) and a D(2)C(10) concentration (240 mu g/L) approaching its solubility limit. Kinetics of photodegradation followed a Langmuir-Hinshelwood model suggesting that the reaction occurred on the surface of the photocatalyst. The presence of h(vb)(+) and OH(.) radical scavengers, including methanol and iodide, inhibited the degradation supporting a photooxidation reaction. Electron scavengers (Ag(+), Cu(2+), and Fe(3+)) had small effects on the degradation rate. The lack of transformation of D(2)C(10) in acetonitrile as solvent indicated that the major oxidants were OH(.) radicals. The presence of tetranitromethane, effectively eliminating the formation of free OH(.) radicals, did not affect the degradation rates significantly. This result, combined with observed increases in photolysis rates with the degree of adsorption of D(2)C(10) onto the surface of the photocatalyst, confirmed that the reaction involved adsorbed 1,10-dichlorodecane and surface bound OH(.) radicals.