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Derivatization Non-targeted Screening of Acids in Oilfield Refinery Wastewater: Identification and Behaviors of Recalcitrant Chlorinated Naphthenic Acids Beili Wang, Hongyang Cui, Hang Liu, and Yi Wan Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b05310 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Dec 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 17, 2018
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Derivatization Non-targeted Screening of Acids in Oilfield Refinery Wastewater:
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Identification and Behaviors of Recalcitrant Chlorinated Naphthenic Acids
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Beili Wang, Hongyang Cui, Hang Liu, Yi Wan*
4
1Laboratory
5
Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
6 7
for Earth Surface Processes, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences,
(Received
)
*Address for Correspondence:
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Address for Correspondence
15
Dr. Yi WAN
16
College of Urban and Environmental Sciences
17
Peking University
18
Beijing 100871, China
19
TEL & FAX: 86-10-62759126
20
Email:
[email protected] 21
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ABSTRACT
23
The non-targeted scanning chemical profiling approach has shown great potential to
24
identify unknown pollutants or novel biological markers; however, the structure identification
25
of unknown compounds is a challenge. In this study, a carboxyl-specific derivatization
26
reagent, N-(4-aminomethylphenyl) pyridinium (AMPP), was coupled with QTOF-MSE-MS
27
scanning to establish a high-throughput non-targeted scanning method for acid compounds.
28
The scanning method can isolate the precursor by data-independent acquisition and can select
29
all of the acid compounds based on the characteristic fragment generated from the
30
derivatization reagent. The method was applied to scan naphthenic acid fraction compounds
31
in petroleum refinery wastewater and identify 70-126 NAs, 30-68 oxy-NAs, 54-60 NAs
32
containing nitrogen, and 66-75 NAs containing both nitrogen and oxygen. Chlorinated NAs
33
(Cl-NAs) including monochlorinated NAs (Cl-NAs), monochlorinated hydroxylated NAs
34
(Cl-OH-NAs), and dichlorinated dihydroxylated NAs (Cl2-(OH)2-NAs) were firstly identified
35
with the aid of chlorine isotopic patterns. The Cl-NAs might be naturally presented in crude
36
oil together with NAs. Occurrences and mass balances of Cl-NAs were further assessed in the
37
wastewater treatment plant in north China. The total concentrations of ∑Cl-NAs were
38
estimated to be 12±7.8-18±17 µg/L and 8.5±2.0-68±35 µg/g in the wastewater and solid
39
samples, respectively. The removal efficiencies of Cl-NAs (-29.9 to 34.3%) were much lower
40
than those of NAs, suggesting the high recalcitrance of chlorinated compounds during the
41
treatment processes. The estimated mass loss fractions due to degradation for Cl-NAs were
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26.5-53.4% of initial loadings, and relatively high fractions (32.1-56.8%) were observed in
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the effluent directly discharged to the environment. Advanced treatment techniques are 2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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needed to effectively reduce the persistent Cl-NAs in the wastewater.
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Keywords: Non-targeted screening, Naphthenic acids, Derivatization, Mass balance,
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Chlorination
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Introduction
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Naphthenic acids (NAs) are an acid-extractable fraction of petroleum, and they have been
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found to be important pollutants in wastewater discharged from various petroleum
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industries.1-3 NA compounds include components with the molecular formula of CnH2n+zO2,
51
where n and z is the carbon number and hydrogen deficiency, respectively. Based on the
52
results of recent studies, these acid-extractable fraction compounds include acidic compounds
53
containing nitrogen and/or sulfur atoms and have various degrees of oxidization, unsaturation,
54
and aromaticity.4-7 For example, oxy-NAs, considered to be the degradation products of NAs,
55
were found to exhibit higher estrogenic activities than the parent compounds.8-11 These
56
findings highlight the need for broader identification of the components of NA fraction
57
compounds (NAFCs) in the environment.
58
The ionization method is essential for the reliable characterization of NA mixtures with
59
mass spectrometry (MS). The widely used electrospray ionization (ESI) and atmospheric
60
pressure chemical ionization (APCI), together with high-resolution MS (HRMS), have greatly
61
facilitated the identification of the elementary compositions of the known NAFCs, but they
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yield little or no fragmentation for elucidating the molecular structures of the pollutants.1-2 In
63
comparison, derivatization coupled with gas chromatogram MS (GC-MS) or liquid
64
chromatogram MS (LC-MS) has been shown to be more sensitive and selective for the
65
characterization of unknown structures of NAFCs, discovering various structures of
66
individual NAs.8,
67
pyridinium (AMPP), was synthesized that can specifically react with the carboxyl group, and
68
it is effective for the structure identification of all fatty acids, because the derivatives
9, 12-14
Recently, a new derivatization reagent, N-(4-aminomethylphenyl)
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generated abundant charge-remote fragmentations.15-18 AMPP could thus enable fragments to
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be yielded from the derivatized NAs and could facilitate the identification of unknown
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NAFCs in various environmental matrixes.
72
The chemical profiling approach based on HRMS scanning, called non-targeted scanning,
73
has shown great potential to identify unknown pollutants or novel biological markers.19-21
74
This approach differs from target ion monitoring, in which only the characteristic ions or ion
75
transitions of target analytes are monitored. Recently, the non-targeted method successfully
76
identified various unknown organo-bromine and organo-iodine compounds in environmental
77
samples based on the isotope features of bromine and iodine.22-24 Precursor ions were
78
analyzed by data-independently acquisition (DIA) mass spectrometry. Halogenated ions were
79
identified based on the characteristic product-ions of bromine or iodine. However, for
80
non-halogenated compounds without characteristic product-ions, it is impossible to select the
81
precursor ions of interest from the thousands of signals obtained. Derivatizations could help
82
resolve the problem because the derivatives, such as AMPP, dansyl chloride etc., can react
83
specifically with certain function groups and generate identical product-ions from the
84
collision energy,10,
85
scanned signals. It has been reported that AMPP could react with the carboxyl group and form
86
product-ions with m/z of 169.0891 and 183.0922.15-18 Thus, derivatization coupled with a
87
nontargeted data acquisition strategy could facilitate the scanning the NAFCs in an effort to
88
identify the unknown carboxylic acid compounds.
15
which could help select the ions of interest from the thousands of
89
To test the hypothesis, this study established a highly sensitive AMPP derivatization
90
method for NAs, which was incorporated with QTOF-MSE-MS to high-throughput scan all of 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the acid compounds. The method was used to scan the unknown acid pollutants in samples
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from a wastewater treatment plant in a petroleum refinery in north China, and to identify the
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existence of chlorinated NAs. Mass balances of chlorinated NAs in the wastewater treatment
94
plant were further assessed, and the compounds were found to be highly persistent during the
95
various treatment processes. Advanced treatment techniques were likely needed to effectively
96
remove the identified recalcitrant compounds. The organic chlorides were naturally presented
97
in trace amounts in crude oil, and identifications of the chlorinated compounds has been
98
rarely conducted as a result of the complex of crude oil.25-26 The results of this study is also
99
beneficial for eliminations of the organic chlorides in petroleum, which caused serious
100
corrosion in the refinery facilities.25-26
101 102
Materials and methods
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Chemicals and reagents.
104
The used chemicals and reagents were shown as follows. 1-adamantaneacetic acid,
105
trans-4-pentylcyclohexane carboxylic acid, cis- and trans- 4-n-propylcyclohexanecarboxylic
106
acid, 2-hexyldecanoic acid, decannoic acid and the commercial mixture of NAs were
107
purchased from TCI (Tokyo Chemical Industry Co., Tokyo, Japan). Cyclohexane pentanoic
108
acid,
109
-amino-methyl] aniline were obtained from Sigma Aldrich (Oakville, ON, Canada).
110
2,4-dinitrochlorobenzene (Cl-DNB) and 1-methyl-1-cyclohexane carboxylic acid were
111
obtained from Alfa Aesar (Ward Hill, MA). Trans-4-tert-butylcyclohexanecarboxylic acid
112
was purchased from Acros Organics (Morris Plains, NJ). 1-adamantane carboxylic acid,
5-beta-cholanic
acid,
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-2-naphthoic
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acid,
and
4-[(N-Boc)
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N,N-dimethyl formamide and N-hydroxybenzotriazole (98%) were purchased J&K Chemical
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(Beijing, China). Methanol, hexane, chloroform, ethyl acetate (EA), diethyl ether, methyl
115
tert-butyl ether (MTBE) and absolute ethanol were purchased from Fisher Chemicals (Fair
116
Lawn, NJ). [3-(dimethylamino) propyl] ethyl carbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC) was
117
obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. n-[4 (Aminomethyl) phenyl]
118
pyridinium (AMPP) was synthesized by the method described previously.15, 17 HPLC grade
119
ammonium acetate was obtained from Dima-Tech Inc. (Richmond Hill, ON, Canada).
120
Ammonia and hydrochloric acid were obtained from Beijing chemicals (Beijing, China). A
121
water purification system of Milli-Q Synthesis was applied to produce distilled water
122
(Millipore, Bedford, MA).
123
Sample collection
124
The wastewater and sludge samples were collected from a wastewater treatment plant
125
that processes petroleum refinery water from oil production platforms in north China. The
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behaviors and mass balance of the NAs have been investigated previously in the plant.27 The
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plant’s treatment consists of physicochemical treatment units (gravity setting, coagulation,
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walnut shell filtration, flotation) and an activated sludge system. The activated sludge system
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is composed of anaerobic and aerobic bioreactors, and the dehydrated sludge were not used
130
for agricultural field augmentation. The hydraulic retention time (HRT) was 3.5 h in each
131
physicochemical treatment tank, 11-16 h in the anaerobic and aerobic treatment system, and
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the sludge retention time was around 11-12 days in the plant. About 3-6 tons of primary
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sludge were pumped into the dewatering room from gravity and coagulation chambers once a
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month, and approximately 0.2 ton/month of sludge was produced in the activated sludge 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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system. After the activated sludge reactor, the final effluent of secondary clarification tank
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was discharged into the environment.
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To investigate the fates of chlorinated NAs in the wastewater treatment plant, wastewater,
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suspended solids, and sludge samples were taken from each treatment unit in 15th May, 2013
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and 15th May, 2014. A composite water sample (12 h) for each sampling location was
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collected by mixing four water samples taken with a sampling interval of 3 h. 500 mL of
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brown glass bottles were prewashed with methanol and deionized water and used for
142
collection of the water samples. All water samples were immediately transported to local
143
laboratory and extracted within 4 h. The suspended solids were collected by filtering the
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water samples with GF/C 1.2 μm glass microfiber filters (Whatman, Maidstone, UK). The
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dewatered and excess sludge were taken from the outlets of the physicochemical treatment
146
tanks and activated sludge tanks, respectively. The cartridges, glass filters and sludge samples
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were kept at -20 C prior to analysis. During the sampling time, the treatment capacity of
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wastewater of the plant was about 13,000 m3/d, and the mean nitrogen concentrations were
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0.02 mg/L for NO2-N and 0.009 for NO3-N in the effluent of the plant. The petroleum content
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including alkane mixtures extracted by tetrachloromethane was 36 mg/L in the influent, and it
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decreased to 1.5 mg/L after the wastewater treatment.
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Sample preparation
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The methods of extraction of chlorinated NAs from the wastewater and solid samples
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were similar to the analysis of naphthenic acids reported previously.10, 27, 28 About 250 mL of
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filtered wastewater with pH adjusted to about 7 were spiked with two surrogate standards (0.1
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µg of 1-pyrenebutyric acid and 12-oxochenodeoxycholic acid), and then passed through an 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Oasis MAX cartridge (150 mg, 6 mL, Waters, USA), that was preconditioned by 6 mL of
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methanol and 6 mL of distilled water. The cartridge was rinsed with 6 mL of 5% ammonia,
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and dried under a flow of nitrogen. 6 mL of methanol was used to prewash the MAX
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cartridge, and then the targeted pollutants were eluted with 12 mL of hydrochloric acid
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saturated ethyl acetate (ethyl acetate : 2M HCl =10:1, v/v). The eluate was dried with nitrogen
162
and reconstituted in 100 µL of methanol for instrument analysis.
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About 0.5 g sludge and 0.1 g suspended solid samples were freeze-dried and spiked with
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two surrogate standards (5 µg of 1-pyrenebutyric acid and 12-oxochenodeoxycholic acid) for
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Soxhlet extraction. The samples were extracted with 200 mL mixture solution of
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hexane/MTBE/methanol (1:1:1, v/v, pH≈7) for 24 h. The extracts were then concentrated to
167
about 2 mL with the rotary evaporation and a gentle stream of nitrogen. After the removal of
168
hexane and MTBE, the residues were mixed with 30 mL of distilled water with pH adjusted
169
to about 7 and purified by the MAX cartridge for the UPLC-ESI--QTOF-MS analysis, as
170
reported previously.10
171
Derivatization of NA mixtures. The petroleum wastewater extract was dried under the nitrogen gas and reconstituted in
172 173
100
μL
of
acetonitrile/N,N-dimethylformamide
174
[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride aqueous solution (640 mM) was
175
added and the mixture was vortexed. Then, 100 μL of N-hydroxybenzotriazole in acetonitrile
176
(10 mM) and 100 μL of AMPPin water (30 mM) were added to the mixture. The capped tubes
177
were vortexed again, filled with nitrogen, and incubated at 70°C for 90 min. After incubation
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and cooling, the reaction mixtures were extracted with the solution of CHCl3/MeOH/water 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
(4:1,
v/v).
100μL
of
Environmental Science & Technology
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(1:1:1, v/v/v, 4.5 mL). The bottom layer were taken into a new tube, and the process was
180
repeated three times. The combined extract was dried under the nitrogen gas, and resolved in
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100 μL of methanol for the UPLC-QTOF-MS analysis. To assess the synthesis of NA artifacts
182
during the extraction and derivatization, NA model compounds were extracted and
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derivatized as described above, and the obtained mass spectrum were similar to those of direct
184
derivatized NA-AMPP.
185
MSE analysis of derivatized NA mixtures.
186
The derivatized Cl-NAs were analyzed using an ACQUITY UPLC system coupled to an
187
electrospray ionization (ESI) Xevo QTOF-MS (G2, Waters, Milford, MA). Derivatized NA
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model compounds was separated by a UPLC BEH C8 column (1.7 μm, 2.1×100 mm, Waters).
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The column temperature was 40°C. The injection volume was 3 μL, and the flow rate was
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kept at 0.3 mL min-1. Deionized water containing 10 mM ammonium acetate (A) and
191
acetonitrile (B) were used as mobile phases. The gradient was as follows: initial 30% B for
192
0.5 min, increased linearly to 80% in 1.5 min, and maintained in 80% for 8 min. B was then
193
sharply returned to the initial percentage and held for 3 min to allow for equilibration.
194
The MSE (DIA scan) and MSMS analysis were conducted under a positive ion mode.
195
MSE experiments were performed by alternating collision energy between high (function 1)
196
and low (function 2) during a single chromatographic run. A generic parameters with two
197
scan functions were listed as follows: 45 V of sampling cone voltage, 0.1 s of scan time, a
198
trap collision energy of 6V in function 1 and 30-50 V in function 2. The raw data from each
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run were analyzed using Progenesis QI 2.3 software (Waters). For the later MS/MS analysis,
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the collision energy for generation of the mass spectrum was set at 30-50V and the rest 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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conditions were the same as above. The other optimized parameters were 3.0 kV for the
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source capillary voltage, 4.0 V for extraction cone voltage, 100°C for source temperature,
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250°C for desolvation temperature, 50 L/h for cone gas flow rate, and 600 L/h for desolvation
204
gas flow rate. Data were collected in the continuum mode. The [M+H]+ ion of
205
leucine-enkephalin (200 pg/μL at flow rate of 5 μL/min) was used as a reference lock mass
206
(m/z 556.2771).
207
Semi-quantification of Cl-NAs.
208
Cl-NAs were further semi-quantified in the non-derivatized samples using the same
209
UPLC-QTOFMS method applied in non-targeted analysis. The parent NAs were
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semi-quantified using an internal standard method with calibration against solutions of
211
commercial NAs reported in a previous study.10 Cl-NAs were semi-quantified in sample
212
extracts relative to the same internal standards using the response factors of NAs, since the
213
standards of Cl-NAs were not commercial available. While the estimated concentrations of
214
Cl-NAs would be affected by quantification method of NAs, concentration variations of the
215
chlorinated compounds in samples during the treatment processes could provide information
216
about removal and mass balance of the chlorinated pollutants in the STP. The whole sample
217
preparation processes were validated by analyzing wastewater and sludge samples spike with
218
NA model compounds and commercial standard mixture. The standards were spiked into the
219
water before solid phase extraction and solid samples prior freeze drying. The recoveries of
220
spiked NA model compounds and commercial standard mixtures were in the range of
221
62.8±1.1% - 99.5±9.6% and 68.8±5.7% - 96.7±4.2% for wastewater and sludge samples,
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respectively. No chlorinated NAs were found in the spiked samples, suggesting that Cl-NAs
223
could not be formed during the sample preparation steps.
224 225
Results and discussion
226
Derivatization of NAs with AMPP.
227
NA mixtures are a group of chemicals that are resistant to ionized fragmentation in the
228
direct negative-ion ESI-MS analysis.1-2 Derivatization coupled with MS analysis has been
229
shown to be superior for identifying the structures of NAs and their analogues in the
230
environmental samples.8, 12-14 Charge-remote fragmentation was found to be effective for the
231
identification of various fatty acids after one-step derivatization of AMPP,15, 29 because the
232
charge-carried reagent specifically reacted with acid groups and produced informative
233
fragment patterns for saturated, unsaturated, and modified fatty acids.17,
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AMPP was derivatized with various NA model compounds to explore its potential application
235
in the identification of carboxylic acid groups. As shown in Figure 1, the fragmentation
236
pattern of aliphatic chain NAs (fatty acids) were similar to those reported previously.15, 29 The
237
most abundant ions were m/z 169.0891 and 183.0922, which were generated from the
238
derivative reagent and identical to various compounds. Notably, distonic ions at m/z 226.1102
239
and 169.0891 were observed as shown in Figure 1, and the structures of these ions have been
240
verified previously.30, 31 The m/z difference between each adjacent product-ion was constant
241
at 14 Da for the saturated fatty acids, suggesting that the methylene group was sequentially
242
lost from the fatty acid carbon chain.15,
243
information about the compound structures compared to the previously used derivative
16, 32
18
In this study,
The derivative reagent provided wealth
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reagent (e.g. BF3-methanol, diazomethane, oxalyl chloride),8,
12
245
identify the alicyclic and/or aromatic NAs in environmental samples.
and it could be applied to
246
Compared to the sequential loss of methylene group in the fatty acid chains (Figure
247
1a-1c), the alicyclic NAs-AMPP presented not only identical and abundant product-ions at
248
m/z 169.0891 and 183.0922, but informative signatures about the alicyclic structures (Figure
249
1d-1k). After derivatization, fragmentation was observed to occur only in the aliphatic chains
250
of the alicyclic NAs, and the alicyclic rings were resistant to fragmentation when the collision
251
energy ranged from 5 to 60 V. Specifically, fragmentation ions generated from the loss of
252
methylene groups were found in NA model compounds of C12H22O2 and three isomers of
253
C11H20O2, and these compounds all contained aliphatic chains in their structures (Figure
254
1e-1h). However, no fragmentation ions besides 169.0891 and 183.0922 could be found for
255
C8H14O2, C11H12O2, C11H16O2, and C12H18O2, which only contain the alicyclic ring structures
256
(Figure 1d, 1i, 1j, and 1k). Thus, based on the mass spectrums of AMPP derivatives of model
257
NA compounds, both the aliphatic and alicyclic NAs-AMPP showed that fragmentations only
258
occurred in the aliphatic carbon chain of the structures, and not happened for the alicyclic
259
rings. The results indicated that the fragmentation of alicyclic NAs-AMPP could be used
260
effectively to determine the existence and positions of alicyclic rings in the NAs. In addition
261
to the abundant fragmentation information, derivatization with AMPPs also greatly improved
262
the analytical sensitivities of NAs with MS analysis. The responses of the NAs-AMPP
263
complex were on average 40 (6-87) folds higher than the non-derivatization compounds for
264
all of the target NA model compounds because the derivatives of NAs were detected as
265
cations rather than anions in the ESI-MS, and AMPP amide group in the derivatives undergo 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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considerable collision-induced dissociation, which greatly enhances the analytical
267
sensitivities.18 Thus, the high sensitivity and abundant product-ions of the AMPP derivatized
268
NAs provide a new method for clarifying the molecular structures of NA mixtures in
269
environmental samples.
270
High-throughput screening of derivatized acids.
271
NAs are highly complex mixtures, and the generally used MS/MS analysis can only
272
analyze limited groups of chemicals, and miss the compounds not selected before the analyses.
273
In this study, AMPP derivatization was incorporated with the UPLC-QTOF-MSE-MS
274
scanning to high-throughput identify the unknown NA compounds in the oilfield wastewater.
275
As shown in Figure 2, the acid compounds in the environmental samples react specifically
276
with AMPP, and the derivatives were further scanned with the MSE mode, which can obtain
277
the precursor ions and corresponding product-ions at the same time. Thus, the AMPP
278
derivatives can generate identical product-ions (m/z 169.0891 and 183.0922) with the high
279
collision energy, which indicates the detection of carboxyl-containing substances in the
280
environmental samples.17 The identification of elementary compositions can be carried out
281
with the accurate mass information of both precursor ions and fragmentations.15,
282
identified acid groups and major functions of the unknown compounds were ultimately
283
validated with the target MS/MS analysis. This non-targeted strategy provided a new way to
284
high-throughput scan compounds with certain function groups in complicated environmental
285
matrixes.
33
The
286
The developed method was applied to scan the acid compounds in the sludge samples
287
collected from the oilfield wastewater treatment plant due to the high concentrations of NAs 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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in the solid samples. The DIA MSE approach help simultaneously acquire all the precursors
289
and their corresponding fragment ions in the derivatized sample extracts by alternating
290
collision energy between high and low during a single chromatographic run. The
291
incorporation of UPLC provided significant qualitative identification advantages, especially
292
for the ions which cannot be resolved by direct MS injection analysis. A 3D ion intensity map
293
was generated for each run, showing the m/z, retention time (min), and intensity with high and
294
low collision energy, which were used to identify the unknown compounds. All the precursor
295
ions with product-ions of both m/z 169.0891 and 183.0922 were firstly selected, and the
296
existences of the ions originated from AMPP suggested that the compounds contained acid
297
function groups. Element analysis was further conducted for these acid compounds. As shown
298
in Figure 3a, 70-126 precursor ions were identified to be NAs, 30-68 ions were oxy-NAs
299
(OxNAs), 54-60 ions were NAs containing nitrogen (NxNAs), and 66-75 ions were NAs
300
containing both nitrogen and oxygen (OxNyNAs). The occurrences of oxygen, nitrogen, and
301
sulfur containing NAs in petroleum-related samples have also been reported in previous
302
investigations.34-37 In addition to the reported NA mixtures, it is interesting that 66-102
303
chlorine-containing NAs (ClxNAs) were identified in the samples with the aid of chlorine
304
isotopic patterns (Figure 3a). As shown in Figure 2, the precursor and some fragmentation
305
ions of the chlorinated acids all exhibited the patterns of chlorine isotopic peaks, suggesting
306
the existences of chlorinated NAs. Cl-NAs can also be separated from most NAs and
307
oxy-NAs in the plot of Kendrick mass defects versus nominal Kendrick mass (Figure 3b). The
308
screened Cl-NAs in a solid sample from the wastewater treatment plant were shown in Table
309
S1. The most frequently identified compounds were three groups of NAs/oxy-NAs containing 15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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1 and 2 chlorine atoms including Cl-NAs, Cl-OH-NAs, and Cl2-(OH)2-NAs, of which the
311
structures were exemplified by three chlorinated isomers, as shown in Figure 4. The
312
diagnostic mass fragmentation for the AMPP-derivatized chlorine-containing NAs was the
313
natural loss of HCl moiety and H2O moieties generated with the high collision energy. Taking
314
these results together, the present study identifies the existence and structures of chlorinated
315
NAs in samples from the treatment plant of petroleum refinery wastewater. It has been
316
reported that the organic chlorides were naturally presented in trace amounts in crude oil,25-26
317
thus Cl-NAs might be naturally presented in crude oil together with NAs.
318
Occurrences of chlorinated NAs in oilfield WWTP.
319
The identified chlorinated NAs were targeted screened in aqueous and solid samples from
320
the wastewater treatment plant in a petroleum refinery in north China.27 The behaviors and
321
mass balance of parent NAs have been investigated previously in the plant. The removal
322
efficiencies of the total concentrations of NAs were estimated to be 73±17%, and
323
biodegradation via activated sludge was the major removal mechanism of NAs.27
324
Comparisons of behaviors of NAs and Cl-NAs in the plant could help assess the persistence
325
and removal mechanism of the newly identified Cl-NAs in petroleum refinery wastewater.
326
The mass difference between chlorinated NAs and NAs is an important issue for
327
identification and semi-quantification of signals of chlorinated NAs. The mass differences of
328
ionization ions between detected abundant chlorinated NAs and NAs were in the range of
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0.0232-0.2132. The mass resolutions required to separate Cl-NAs and NAs, Cl-OH-NAs and
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NAs, and Cl2-(OH)2-NAs and NAs were in the range of 9400-15000, 1500-4300 and
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2200-5000, respectively. In this study, the full-scan mode (mass range: 250-1000 Da) was 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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performed at resolution of 25000 to resolve the mass ions of the target chlorinated NAs and
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NAs. The incorporation of UPLC also helped separate the ions through chromatographic
334
separations.
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Tables S2 and S3 show the semi-quantified concentrations of Cl-NAs, Cl-OH-NAs, and
336
Cl2-(OH)2-NAs in water and solid samples collected from the individual treatment tanks in
337
the wastewater treatment plant. Concentrations of total chlorinated NAs were in the range of
338
12 ± 7.8-18±17 µg/L and 8.5±2.0-68±35 µg/g in the wastewater and solid samples,
339
respectively. The concentrations of chlorine-containing NAs were estimated to be 3.6-13%
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and 0.5-10.2% of those of the total NAs previously reported in the wastewater and solid
341
samples, respectively.23 The dominant isomers in the crude oil refinery wastewater were
342
Cl-OH-NAs with Z values of 0, -2, and -4, and those in the solid samples were
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Cl2-(OH)2-NAs with Z values of 0, -2, and -4. The preferential partition of more chlorinated
344
NAs in the solid phase is consistent with more hydrophobicity of the highly chlorinated
345
compounds. The removal efficiencies, which are estimated by comparing the levels in the
346
refinery influent and secondary effluent, ranged from -29.9 to 34.3% for the chlorinated NAs
347
(Table 1). The Cl-NAs, Cl-OH-NAs, and Cl2-(OH)2-NAs all exhibit recalcitrance during the
348
physical and biological treatment processes. The low removal efficiencies of the chlorinated
349
NAs were significantly different from those of the parent NAs, of which 73±17% were
350
effectively removed in the water phase in the wastewater treatment plant.27 Since NAs has
351
been shown to be effectively removed by biodegradation in the plant,27 the Cl-NAs exhibited
352
high persistence to biodegradation during the active sludge treatment processes. This is
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consistent with the fact that chlorination would lead to high recalcitrance of compounds to
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biodegradation in the environment.38
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Mass flows and mass balance of chlorine-containing NAs were also assessed in the
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wastewater treatment plant in the petroleum refinery. The variations of mass flux of the total
357
chlorine-containing NAs are shown in Figure 5, and those of the three identified Cl-NAs are
358
shown in Figures S1, S2, and S3. All of the individual chlorinated compounds exhibited
359
similar mass fractionations. The mass flux of the total chlorinated NAs in the raw petroleum
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wastewater and sorbed phases was 185 g/d and 173 g/d, respectively. The variation
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percentages of mass flux ranged from -23.6 to 15.3% in the water phases in all of the
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treatment units, including the physicochemical and biological treatment processes. The
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relatively low mass flux variability in the all treatment tanks indicated that the adsorption and
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degradation were of minor importance in the removal of chlorinated NAs in the plant. In the
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effluent, the mass of total chlorinated NAs was 120 g/d. To better understand the removal
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mechanisms of chlorinated NAs in the plant, the mass balance of the chlorinated compounds
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was divided into three fractions (%): secondary effluent (i), dewatered and excess sludge (ii),
368
and total lost (iii) relative to the initial mass flux in the influent (100%) (Figure 6). The
369
estimated mass loss fractions due to degradation for Cl-NAs ranged from 26.5% to 53.4%,
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while the percentages of sorption removal and sludge discharge were only 6.5-31.8%, and
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high fractions (32.1-56.8%) of chlorinated NAs in the effluent were discharged to the
372
environment. It is interesting to note that the mass proportion of sludge discharge for different
373
chlorinated NA congeners increased linearly as Z values increased, suggesting that
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chlorinated NAs with high cyclization are more easily absorbed in the solid phases. The 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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results further demonstrated that chlorinated NAs were persistent during the treatment
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processes in the plant compared to the parent NAs27 and that advanced treatment techniques
377
were needed to effectively reduce the chlorinated compounds in the wastewater.
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In summary, a highly sensitive analytical method with AMPP derivatization was
379
established for analysis of NAs and was further incorporated with QTOF-MSE-MS scanning
380
to develop a high-throughput non-targeted scanning method for acid compounds. The method
381
was applied to scan the unknown acid pollutants in the petroleum refinery wastewater and to
382
identify chlorinated NAs in the samples. Occurrences and mass balances of chlorinated NAs
383
were then assessed in the wastewater treatment plant. Chlorinated NAs were found to be
384
highly persistent during various treatment processes compared to the parent NAs, and future
385
study of advanced treatment techniques is needed to effectively remove the chlorinated
386
compounds in the wastewater.
387 388 389
Acknowledgments The research is supported by the Key Program for International S&T Cooperation
390
Projects
of
China
(S2016G6417),
National
Basic
Research
Program
of
China
391
(2015CB458900), National Natural Science Foundation of China (201677003, 41821005),
392
and Henry Fok education foundation (161073).
393 394
Supplementary Data
395
Text, figures, and tables addressing (1) mass flows of Cl-NAs, Cl-OH-NAs,
396
Cl-(OH)2-NAs in the treatment plant, (2) list of screened Cl-NAs in a solid sample; (3) 19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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concentrations of Cl-NAs in the water phases, and (4) concentrations of Cl-NAs in suspended
398
solids and sludge samples.
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Table 1. Removal efficiencies of detected chlorinated naphthenic acids in oilfield refinery wastewater treatments. Total Z=0 Z=-2 Z=-4 Z=-6 Z=-8 Z=-10 Z=-12 Z=-14
Total 6.4 1.7 -29.9 -4.8 23.8 27.9 22.7 27.8 34.3
Cl-NAs -16.9 -24.0 -97.5 -36.5 3.2 18.0 36.3 46.8 37.9
Cl-OH-NAs 9.8 17.8 -4.6 -5.5 39.7 -5.4 14.2 16.6 28.9
Cl2-(OH)2-NAs 39.3 29.6 33.6 44.6 -1.0 75.9 14.2 -5.8 42.0
532 533
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Figure 1. Product-ion MS spectra of model aliphatic chain NAs (a-c), alicyclic NAs (d-k) after derivatization with AMPP. The majority of the abundant product-ions after fragmentation with AMPP were assigned and illustrated in the corresponding molecular structures.*: distonic ion. 26 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Figure 2. A schematic of the workflow used to identify chlorinated napthenic acids in oilfield refinery wastewater. *: distonic ion. The UPLC-QTOFMS spectrums show the identifications of Cl-NAs in samples by data-independent acquisition (DIA) MSE approach.
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Figure 3. Screened precursor ions and retention time for the extracted chemical features of derivatized NAs, OxNAs, NxNAs, OxNyNAs and ClxNAs in a sample extract a); and plots of Kendrick mass defect versus nominal Kendrick mass for the five groups of acid compounds.
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Figure 4. MS/MS spectra of Cl-NAs (a), Cl-OH-NAs (b) and Cl2-(OH)2-NAs (c) derivatized with AMPP in extracts of sludge samples from the petroleum refinery wastewater plant. 29 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Figure 5. Mass flows (g/d) of total chlorinated NAs in a petroleum refinery wastewater treatment plant in north China.
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Figure 6. Mass proportions of chlorinated NAs in (i) secondary effluent (Weff), (ii) dewatered sludge (Wsludge), and (iii) total lost (Wlost) relative to the calculated initial loading (100%) in the petroleum refinery wastewater treatment plant, z is hydrogen deficiency of Cl-NAs.
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TOC
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