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Photochemical transformation of four ionic liquid cation structures in aqueous solution Sarah G. Pati, and William A. Arnold Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04016 • Publication Date (Web): 28 Sep 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 29, 2017
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Environmental Science & Technology
Photochemical transformation of four ionic liquid cation structures in aqueous solution Sarah G. Pati and William A. Arnold∗ Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering, University of Minnesota, 500 Pillsbury Drive SE, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0116, United States E-mail:
[email protected] Phone: (612) 625-8582. Fax: (612) 626-7750
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Abstract
1
2
Ionic liquids (ILs) are a new class of solvents expected to be used increasingly by
3
the chemical industry in the coming years. Given their slow biodegradation and limited
4
sorption affinities, IL cations have a high potential to reach aquatic environments. We
5
investigated the fate of ILs in sunlit surface water by determining direct and indirect
6
photochemical transformation rates of imidazolium, pyridinium, pyrrolidinium, and
7
piperidinium cations. The photodegradation of all investigated IL cations was faster
8
in solutions containing dissolved organic matter (DOM) than in ultrapure water, illus-
9
trating the importance of indirect photochemical processes. Experiments with model
10
sensitizers and DOM isolates revealed that reactions with hydroxyl radicals dominated
11
the transformation of tested IL cations. Bimolecular reaction rate constants with hy-
12
droxyl radicals ranged from (2.04 ± 0.37) · 109 M−1 s−1 to (8.47 ± 0.97) · 109 M−1
13
s−1 and showed an increase in rate constants with increasing carbon side-chain length.
14
Consequently, average estimated half-lives of IL cations in sunlit surface water ranged
15
from 32 ± 4 days to 135 ± 25 days, highlighting the potential of IL cations to become
16
persistent aquatic contaminants.
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17
Introduction
18
Ionic liquids (ILs) are a relatively new class of solvents and expected to be used increasingly
19
by the chemical industry in the coming years as replacements for volatile organic solvents. 1,2
20
Due to their low volatility, non-flammability, and thermal stability, ILs have the potential
21
to be applied in a variety of processes ranging from synthesis and catalysis to energy and
22
remediation technologies as well as analytical applications. 2–4 Most ILs are composed of
23
an organic or inorganic anion and a quaternary ammonium cation, such as imidazolium,
24
pyridinium, pyrrolidinium, piperidinium, or tetraalkylammonium (cations used in this study
25
are shown in Figure 1). IL cations typically have asymmetric N -alkyl substituents with
26
side-chain lengths between 2 and 10 C atoms making them generally hydrophilic in nature. 5
27
Given their ionic structure and hydrophilic properties, IL cations are not likely to be readily
28
removed from aqueous systems through sorption and sedimentation. Consequently, if their
29
consumption volume increases, IL cations have the potential to become mobile environmen-
30
tal contaminants that can reach surface waters through accidental release into industrial
31
wastewater streams. 4
32
Biodegradation studies of IL cations have found that these chemicals, particularly those
33
with aromatic rings, are not readily biodegradable in conventional wastewater treatment sys-
34
tems. 6–8 For example, Romero et al. 8 showed that only 2−10% of imidazolium-based ILs are
35
removed after 10 days of incubation with a wastewater microbial consortia. Consequently,
36
the removal of IL cations will likely be minimal during biological wastewater treatment, and
37
IL cations could enter aquatic environments via industrial wastewater effluents. While ex-
38
posure of surface waters to IL cations is likely to increase with usage volumes, the potential
39
fate and impact of these compounds on aquatic environments is still unclear. Recent toxicity
40
studies demonstrate a significant variability of effects on aquatic organisms by different ILs
41
with EC50 -values ranging from nM to mM concentrations, 4,9,10 whereas fate processes of IL
42
cations in surface waters have received very little attention. Physical processes are unlikely to
43
impact the fate of IL cations in surface waters given the generally weak adsorption affinities 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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N
N N
1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium (C2-imidazolium)
N
N N
C2H5
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C4H9
1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium (C4-imidazolium)
N
C6H13
1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium (C6-imidazolium)
N N
C8H17
1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium (C8-imidazolium)
N
N
C10H21
1-decyl-3-methylimidazolium (C10-imidazolium)
N
N C4H9
C4H9
1-butylpyridinium (C4-pyridinium)
1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium (C4-pyrrolidinium)
C4H9 1-butyl-1-methylpiperidinium (C4-piperidinium)
Figure 1. Structures of all IL cations investigated in this study with abbreviations in parenthesis. 44
of imidazolium, pyridinium, and tetraalkylammonium cations for aquatic sediments, natural
45
soils, and bacterial cells. 11–13 Consequently, chemical and biological transformation processes
46
are key to assessing IL cations in the environment. Studies on the biological transformation
47
of IL cations in natural systems are scarce. The persistence of quaternary ammonium com-
48
pounds towards degradation in sewage sludge communities, however, suggests that biological
49
transformations will play a minor role. 14,15 The importance of abiotic transformation pro-
50
cesses, in particular the direct and indirect photolysis, of IL cations in sunlit surface waters
51
is still essentially unexplored.
52
Due to the lack of efficient removal from sorption and biodegradation, photochemical
53
transformation processes could have a significant effect on the fate of IL cations in surface
54
water. So far, only Calza and co-workers 16,17 have investigated the direct and indirect
55
photochemical transformation of 1-ethyl-1-methylimidazolium and three pyridinium cations
56
under environmental conditions. They concluded that direct photochemical transformation
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57
will play a major role in most cases and that half-lives of 1-ethyl-1-methylimidazolium in
58
surface waters can be up to one month. Unfortunately, experiments to study the effect
59
of indirect photochemical transformations were only performed with model sensitizers. In
60
natural waters, the presence of dissolved organic matter (DOM) will influence the relative
61
importance of direct and indirect photochemical processes. Additionally, indirect processes
62
may be enhanced via association with DOM, as shown for charged amines. 18
63
To improve the general assessment of the fate of IL cations in sunlit surface water,
64
this study aimed to determine the direct and indirect photochemical transformation rates
65
of a set of IL cations with imidazolium, pyridinium, pyrrolidinium, and piperidinium core
66
structures and varying side-chain length. We performed laboratory-scale irradiation exper-
67
iments with model sensitizers for different photochemically-produced reactive intermediates
68
(PPRIs), namely hydroxyl radicals, singlet oxygen, and carbonate radicals, as well as exper-
69
iments with DOM isolates and natural water samples. From this data set, we determined
70
bimolecular reaction rate constants of the selected IL cations with hydroxyl radicals, the
71
relative contribution of direct and indirect photochemical transformation of IL cations in
72
natural water samples, and estimations of half-lives in sunlit surface waters under environ-
73
mental conditions.
74
Experimental Section
75
All chemicals used as well as details on organic matter isolate solutions and natural water
76
samples are described in the Supporting Information (SI). IL cations will be abbreviated
77
with the number of C-atoms in the side-chain and the name of the ring structure, e.g.,
78
C2 -imidazolium for 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium (see Figure 1).
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79
Irradiation experiments in solutions with dissolved organic matter
80
Photolysis experiments were performed in solutions containing DOM to determine (i) the
81
relevance of direct photochemical transformation of IL cations in natural waters, (ii) the im-
82
portance of PPRIs for the indirect photochemical transformation of IL cations, and (iii) any
83
influence of association with dissolved organic matter on the photochemical transformation
84
rates of IL cations. All experiments were run in an Atlas Suntest CPS+ solar simulator
85
equipped with a xenon arc lamp and a 290-nm cutoff filter. As in previous studies, 19–21 test
86
tubes were irradiated at an angle of approximately 30° from horizontal. A light intensity of
87
765 W m−2 and 10-mL quartz test tubes (13 mm o.d., 11 mm i.d.) sealed with aluminum
88
foil and rubber caps were used for all experiments with DOM.
89
Experiments with Suwannee River Fulivc Acid (SRFA), Suwannee River Natural Organic
90
Matter (SRNOM), Mississippi river water and wastewater effluent were conducted with C6 -
91
imidazolium (see SI for details on DOM isolates and water samples). In addition, experiments
92
with Suwannee River Humic Acid (SRHA) were performed with all imidazolium as well
93
as with C4 -pyridinium cations. DOM isolates were diluted with phosphate buffer (5 mM
94
NaH2 PO4 , pH 7.0) until the transmittance at 290 nm was above 50%. Each test tube was
95
filled with 6 mL of a buffered DOM isolate solution or a natural water sample and spiked
96
with 10 µM of one IL and, in experiments assessing the role of hydroxyl radical, 10 µM
97
benzoic acid. Control experiments accounting for direct photochemical transformation and
98
non-photochemical loss were run for all IL cations. Direct photolysis controls were performed
99
in ultrapure water containing the IL and benzoic acid. Dark controls were run in test tubes
100
wrapped in aluminum foil containing SRHA solutions with the IL and benzoic acid. An
101
experiment with the hydroxyl radical quencher 2-propanol was performed in buffered solution
102
containing SRFA, 10 µM C6 -imidazolium, 10 µM benzoic acid, and 26 mM 2-propanol.
103
During all experiments, sub-samples of 0.5 mL were withdrawn from the test tubes at regular
104
time intervals and transferred into 1.5-mL amber glass HPLC vials with crimp caps. For
105
samples containing benzoic acid, 10 µL 2 M HCl was added to each HPLC vial to decrease 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the pH to ≤ 2. Pseudo-first order rate constants were determined as the slopes of linear
107
regressions of log-normalized concentrations, ln (c/c0 ), vs. reaction time. Differences in
108
pseudo-first order rate constants between DOM experiments and direct photolysis controls
109
were attributed to indirect photochemical transformations and differences in pseudo-first
110
order rate constants between direct photolysis and dark controls were attributed to direct
111
photochemical transformation.
112
Irradiation experiments with model sensitizers
113
Experiments to determine the reactivity of IL cations towards hydroxyl radicals, singlet
114
oxygen, and carbonate radicals were conducted in 10-mL borosilicate glass tubes (13 mm o.d.,
115
11 mm i.d.) sealed with aluminum foil and rubber caps according to previously published
116
procedures. 22–25 All experiments were run in duplicate in the solar simulator at a light
117
intensity of 765 W m−2 (hydroxyl and carbonate radical experiments) or 350 W m−2 (singlet
118
oxygen experiments). For hydroxyl radical experiments, test tubes were initially filled with
119
6 mL phosphate buffer (10 mM NaH2 PO4 , pH 7.0), 10 µM imidazolium or pyridinium IL,
120
10 µM benzoic acid, and 1 mM H2 O2 . Control experiments were run without H2 O2 in the
121
solar simulator for all IL cations. A dark control in the presence of H2 O2 was performed
122
with C6 -imidazoium. Equivalent experiments with C4 -pyrrolidinium or C4 -piperidinium were
123
performed with initial IL concentrations of 20 µM. Singlet oxygen experiments were run in
124
a similar way with test tubes containing 6 mL phosphate buffer (10 mM NaH2 PO4 , pH 7.0),
125
10 µM imidazolium or pyridinium IL, and 10 µM rose bengal. Control experiments were run
126
without rose bengal. Carbonate radical experiments were performed in test tubes filled with
127
6 mL carbonate buffer (0.7 M NaHCO3 , pH 10), 10 µM C6 -imidazolium, and 1 mM H2 O2 .
128
Temporally resolved samples were taken as described above, but shorter time intervals were
129
used due to faster reactions. Bimolecular reaction rate constants of IL cations with hydroxyl
130
radicals (ki,HO• ) were derived from linear regressions of log-normalized concentrations of IL
131
cations vs. benzoic acid as shown in eq 1 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ln
[IL] [IL]0
=
ki,HO• kBZA,HO•
· ln
[BZA] [BZA]0
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(1)
132
where kBZA,HO• is the bimolecular reaction rate constant of benzoic acid at pH 7 with hydroxyl
133
radicals ((5.93 ± 0.55) · 109 M−1 s−1 ), 26 [IL] and [BZA] are concentrations of an IL cation and
134
benzoic acid measured in the same sub-sample, and [IL]0 and [BZA]0 are initial concentrations
135
of the IL cation and benzoic acid, respectively. The ratio of measured pseudo-first order rate
136
constant and bimolecular reaction rate constant of benzoic acid and furfuryl alcohol was
137
used to calculate steady-state concentrations of hydroxyl radicals ([OH]ss ) and singlet oxygen
138
([1 O2 ]ss ), respectively. A bimolecular reaction rate constant of 8.3 · 107 M−1 s−1 was used
139
for the reaction of furfuryl alcohol with singlet oxygen. 22,27 No probe compound was used to
140
quantify the steady-state concentration of carbonate radicals. Carbonate radicals are more
141
stable in water than hydroxyl radicals and steady-state concentrations of carbonate radicals
142
are expected to be slightly higher than steady-state concentrations of hydroxyl radicals under
143
the same experimental conditions. 28,29
144
Analytical methods
145
Ultraviolet-visible light absorption spectra were measured with a Shimadzu UV-1601PC
146
spectrophotometer using 1-cm quartz cuvettes. Concentrations of imidazolium and pyri-
147
dinium cations and benzoic acid were determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography
148
(HPLC) on an Agilent 1100 LC system with a variable wavelength detector set to 210 nm.
149
For most analyses, an Eclipse XDB C-18 column (4.6 × 150 mm, 3.5 µm, Agilent) was used
150
with isocratic mixtures or step gradients of methanol and water (both containing 10 mM
151
ammonium acetate and 0.1% acetic acid) at a flow rate of 1 mL min−1 . Eluent mixtures
152
were chosen to enable quantification of IL cations and benzoic acid in the same run, which
153
was possible for all compounds except for C2 -imidazolium. C2 -imidazolium was measured
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separately on a Zorbax SB-C8 column (4.6 × 150 mm, 3.5 µm, Agilent) with 1 ml min−1
155
of 50% acetonitrile and 50% 10 mM ammonium acetate in water. Injection volumes were
156
100 µL for all measurements. C4 -pyrrolidinium and C4 -piperidinium were quantified with a
157
Hewlett Packard 1050 HPLC system coupled to a Hewlett Packard 1100 MSD mass spec-
158
trometer operated in positive electrospray ionization and selective ion monitoring mode. A
159
BetaSil C-18 column (2.1 × 50 mm, 5 µm, Thermo Scientific) was used with an 8-min linear
160
gradient from 70% to 0% 2 mM ammonium acetate in water and 30% to 100% methanol at
161
a flow rate of 200 µL min−1 . Injection volumes were 5 µL and the monitored mass-to-charge
162
(m/z) ratios were 142 and 156. All standards and samples containing C4 -pyrrolidinium were
163
amended with 10 µM C4 -piperidinium as an internal standard and vice versa.
164
Results and Discussion
165
Photochemical transformation of C6 -imidazolium in natural water
166
samples
167
The photochemical transformation of C6 -imidazolium, an IL cation with a medium-sized
168
alkyl side-chain, was studied under simulated sunlight in the presence and absence of DOM.
169
Figure 2 shows the time course of normalized C6 -imidazolium concentrations during irra-
170
diation in ultapure water and in three DOM-containing samples. The photodegradation
171
half-life of C6 -imidazolium was 345 ± 20 h in ultrapure water, 65 ± 7 h in wastewater ef-
172
fluent, 40 ± 3 h in Mississippi river water, and 24 ± 1 h in a buffered solution containing
173
SRFA. The significant increase of transformation rates in the presence of DOM indicates
174
an important contribution of indirect photochemical processes towards the transformation
175
of C6 -imidazolium. Estimates from comparing pseudo-first order reaction rate constants
176
suggest that the contribution of indirect photochemical transformation ranged between 81%
177
and 94%.
178
Because of the small contribution of direct photolysis, the differences in photochemical 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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-1
1.0
kobs = 0.0020 ± 0.0003 h
0.8 -1
kobs = 0.013 ± 0.002 h
c/c0
0.6
0.4
0.2
ultrapure water wastewater effluent Mississippi river water SRFA solution
0.0 0
10
20
-1
kobs = 0.023 ± 0.001 h
-1
kobs = 0.029 ± 0.001 h
30 40 time (h)
50
60
Figure 2. Time-trend of normalized concentrations (c/c0 ) of C6 -imidazolium during irradiation experiments in ultrapure water (green circles), wastewater effluent (yellow triangles), Mississippi river water (turquoise diamonds), and buffered SRFA solution (red squares). Solid lines represent nonlinear regressions of first-order reaction kinetics with the fitting parameter kobs . The faster rate of loss in the organic matter-containing solutions indicates a role for indirect photolysis.
179
transformation rates observed in the three DOM-containing samples cannot be explained
180
by light screening. In fact, the light transmission was lower for the SRFA solution than
181
for the Mississippi river and wastewater effluent samples (see Figure S2). The differences in
182
photochemical transformation rates were likely caused by varying steady-state concentrations
183
of PPRIs formed in the presence of different DOM sources, but photodegradation rates of C6 -
184
imidazolium did not correlate with dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations (SRFA:
185
7.0 mg/L, Mississippi: 7.0 mg/L, effluent: 10.4 mg/L) or pH values (SRFA: 7.0, Mississippi:
186
8.3, effluent: 8.2). It has previously been shown, however, that the quality of DOM has
187
an important influence on PPRI steady state concentrations. 21 Considering that the three
188
types of DOM used in our experiments have very different sources, the composition of DOM
189
molecules is likely very different in these three samples.
190
Role of PPRIs in the photochemical transformation of IL cations
191
As described above, transformation of C6 -imidazolium under simulated sunlight indicates an
192
important role of indirect photochemical processes. To identify which PPRIs contribute to 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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193
increased transformation rates of C6 -imidazolium in solutions containing DOM, we performed
194
irradiation experiments with model sensitizers to generate specific PPRIs. Figure 3a shows
195
normalized concentrations of C6 -imidazolium in the presence of hydroxyl radicals, singlet O2 ,
196
and carbonate radicals. No significant change in C6 -imidazolium concentration was observed
197
over the course of 50 min in experiments with singlet O2 and carbonate radicals. In fact, none
198
of the imidazolium or pyridinium cations showed significant reactivity towards singlet O2 (see
199
Figure S3). Singlet O2 is known to efficiently react with compounds containing imidazole
200
rings, such as the amino acid histidine, 30 however, the presence of a positive charge in the
201
ring seems to hinder the same reaction with imidazolium cations. Carbonate radicals react
202
selectively with organic compounds, particularly with aromatic amines, phenolates, and keto
203
groups. 28 The fact that C6 -imidazolium does not contain such functional groups explains the
204
lack of reactivity towards carbonate radicals.
205
In contrast to the persistence towards singlet O2 and carbonate radicals, a significant
206
decrease in concentration was observed in the presence of hydroxyl radicals for all tested IL
207
cations (see Figures S3-4). The half-life of C6 -imidazolium transformation in the presence of
208
hydroxyl radicals ([OH]ss = (4.6 ± 1.0) · 10−14 M) as shown in Figure 3a was 49.8 ± 0.8 min.
209
Despite the fact that hydroxyl radicals react unselectively with most organic compounds,
210
distinct variations in transformation rates were observed for the different IL cations (see
211
Figures S3-4). All imidazolium cations were transformed faster than C4 -pyridinium, C4 -
212
pyrrolidinium, and C4 -piperidinium, which had the longest half-life of 196±6 min. Half-lives
213
of the imidazolium cations ranged from 77 ± 6 min for C2 -imidazolium to 32.9 ± 0.2 min
214
for C10 -imidazolium. These results suggest that (i) imidazolium rings were more reactive
215
towards hydroxyl radicals than the other ring structures and (ii) elongation of the side-chain
216
increases the reactivity towards hydroxyl radicals.
217
In addition to reactive oxygen species and radical PPRIs, excited triplet states of DOM
218
play an important role in the indirect photochemical transformation of many organic com-
219
pounds. 31 In experiments with the model DOM isolates SRFA, SRHA, and SRNOM, photo-
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a)
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1.0
0.8
c/c0
0.6
0.4
-1
kobs = 0.016 ± 0.001 min
0.2
hydroxyl radicals singlet oxygen carbonate radicals
0.0 0
b)
10
20 30 time (min)
40
50
1.0
0.8
c/c0
0.6
0.4 SRFA + 2-PrOH ultrapure water SRNOM SRFA SRHA
0.2
0.0 0
10
20 30 time (h)
-1
kobs = 0.027 ± 0.002 h
-1
kobs = 0.029 ± 0.001 h
-1
kobs = 0.029 ± 0.001 h
40
50
Figure 3. (a) Time-trend of normalized concentrations (c/c0 ) of C6 -imidazolium during irradiation experiments with model sensitizers producing hydroxyl radicals (blue circles), singlet oxygen (red triangles), and carbonate radicals (green squares). Solid lines represent nonlinear regressions of first-order reaction kinetics with the fitting parameter kobs . Steady-state concentrations of the reactive species were approximately 5 · 10−14 M for hydroxyl radicals, 2 · 10−11 M for singlet oxygen, and ≥ 10−13 M for carbonate radicals. Transformation of C6 -imidazolium would be detected with bimolecular reaction rate constants of ≥ 106 M−1 s−1 and ≥ 108 M−1 s−1 for singlet oxygen and carbonate radicals, respectively. (b) Time-trend of normalized concentrations (c/c0 ) of C6 -imidazolium during irradiation experiments with SRFA (red squares), SRFA and 2-propanol (green triangles), SRNOM (blue diamonds), SRHA (yellow circles), and ultrapure water (green circles). Solid lines represent nonlinear regressions of firstorder reaction kinetics with the fitting parameter kobs . The difference between transformation rates in ultrapure water and SRFA solutions containing 2-propanol illustrates the effect of light screening by DOM on the direct photolysis of C6 -imidazolium.
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220
chemical transformation of C6 -imidazolium was observed at comparable rates with half-lives
221
of 20.3 ± 2.5 to 23.7 ± 0.8 h (see Figure 3b). Because reactions with singlet O2 and carbonate
222
radicals can be excluded, only reactions with hydroxyl radicals and excited triplet states of
223
DOM can account for C6 -imidazolium photodegradation. To verify whether only hydroxyl
224
radicals or both PPRIs were responsible for C6 -imidazolium photodegradation, a second irra-
225
diation experiment with SRFA was performed with 26 mM 2-propanol, which is widely used
226
to quench hydroxyl radicals. 19,29 As apparent from Figure 3b, addition of 2-propanol to the
227
SRFA solution completely inhibited transformation of C6 -imidazolium, which suggests that
228
in DOM-containing solutions, only hydroxyl radicals play a significant role in the indirect
229
photolysis of IL cations. These results are, in part, contrasting to previous results pub-
230
lished for C2 -imidazolium and C4 -pyridinium, where reactions were reported to occur with
231
hydroxyl radicals, singlet O2 , and triplet excited states of antraquinone-2-sulfonic acid. 16,17
232
While reaction rates with triplet excited states of antraquinone-2-sulfonic acid cannot be
233
compared directly to the DOM used in our study, the bimolecular reaction rate constants
234
with singlet oxygen determined in these previous studies were small (0.9 − 1.5 · 106 M−1
235
s−1 ) 16,17 compared to other organic contaminants and associated with large errors.
236
Bimolecular reaction rates of IL cations with hydroxyl radicals
237
We determined bimolecular reaction rate constants of IL cations with hydroxyl radicals
238
(ki,OH ) in competition experiments with benzoic acid using either hydrogen peroxide or SRHA
239
as a source for hydroxyl radicals. Dark controls with both hydrogen peroxide and SRHA
240
showed no significant changes in IL cation concentrations (see Figures S3 and S5-10). Figure
241
4a shows log-normalized concentrations of the 5 imidazolium cations vs. log-normalized
242
concentrations of benzoic acid. From the slope of the linear regressions shown in Figure 4a
243
and Figures S5-10 and the bimolecular reaction rate constant of benzoic acid, ki,OH -values
244
were calculated for all IL cations. ki,OH -values of imidazolium cations increased with the
245
number of C atoms in the side-chain from (2.57 ± 1.10) · 109 M−1 s−1 for C2 -imidazolium to 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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246
(8.47 ± 0.97) · 109 M−1 s−1 for C10 -imidazolium (see Table 1). This trend is illustrated in
247
Figure 4b where ki,OH -values are plotted against the number of aliphatic C-atoms in each
248
molecule. Values of ki,OH for C4 -pyridinium, C4 -pyrrolidinium, and C4 -piperidinium were all
249
approximately 2 · 109 M−1 s−1 and thus smaller than the values of any imidazolium cation
250
(see Table 1 and Figure 4b).
251
Reactions of hydroxyl radicals with organic compounds are unspecific and occur at various
252
functional groups. H-atom abstraction from aliphatic C–H bonds and OH-group addition
253
to aromatic rings are commonly observed. 26 The trend of increasing ki,OH -values with side-
254
chain length observed for the imidazolium cations suggests that H-atom abstractions at C–H
255
bonds in the side-chain contributes significantly to the overall reaction of IL cations with
256
hydroxyl radicals. This trend is, however, less pronounced than in the case of simple alkanes
257
where only H-atom abstraction at C–H bonds occurs. ki,OH -values from Buxton et al. 26
258
show a stronger increase per additional C-atom for the alkane series from methane to octane
259
than ki,OH -values for imidazolium cations (see Figure 4b). The fact that the three other
260
IL cations all have smaller ki,OH -values than the smallest imidazolium cation suggests that
261
reactions with hydroxyl radicals might occur both at the side-chain and the ring in the case
262
of imidazolium cations. In agreement with our findings, reaction products identified for
263
N -alkylpyridinium cations under photocatalytic conditions with TiO2 were predominantly
264
side-chain hydroxylations. 32
265
While bimolecular reaction rate constants determined by Calza and co-workers for C2 -
266
imidazolium (2·1010 M−1 s−1 ) 16 and C4 -pyridinium (3·108 M−1 s−1 ) 17 with hydroxyl radicals
267
are in agreement with our results considering experimental uncertainties, other studies using
268
H2 O2 and UV-irradiation or Fenton reactions have observed very different trends in reactiv-
269
ity of imidazolium cations towards hydroxyl radicals. Siedlecka and Stepnowski 33 and Step-
270
nowski and Zaleska 34 have investigated the removal rates of C4 -, C6 -, and C8 -imidazolium in
271
Fenton and UV/H2 O2 systems, respectively, and observed increasing removal with decreas-
272
ing side-chain length. Although these results contrast with the trend in bimolecular reaction
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a)
-1.2
C2-imidazolium C4-imidazolium C6-imidazolium C8-imidazolium C10-imidazolium
ln(c/c0) for IL cations
-1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.0
b)
12
-1.2
8
9
-1
-1
-0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1.0 ln(c/c0) for benzoic acid
alkanes imidazolium cations C4-pyridinium C4-pyrrolidinium C4-piperidinium
10
kHO• (10 M s )
-0.2
6 4 2 0 0
c)
-1.2
4 6 8 aliphatic C-atoms
10
12
H2O2 in buffer SRFA in buffer Mississippi water Waste water effluent
-1.0 ln(c/c0) for C6-imidazolium
2
-0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.0
-0.2
-0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1.0 ln(c/c0) for benzoic acid
-1.2
Figure 4. (a) Log-normalized concentrations of imidazolium cations vs. benzoic acid from irradiation experiments with H2 O2 . (b) Second order reaction rate constants with hydroxyl radicals of imidazolium cations (green circles), C4 -pyridinium (red diamonds), C4 -pyrrolidinium (blue triangle), C4 -piperidinium (purple hexagon), and alkanes (yellow squares). Error bars are 95%-confidence intervals and values for alkanes are from Buxton et al. 26 (c) Log-normalized concentrations of C6 -imidazolium vs. benzoic 15 ACSHParagon Plus Environment acid from irradiation experiments with O (blue circles), SRFA (red squares), Mississippi river water 2 2 (turquoise hexagons) and wastewater effluent (yellow triangles).
Environmental Science & Technology
273
rate constants observed in our study, it is difficult to compare the results from our experi-
274
ments with these two studies. First, experimental procedures were different in that different
275
light sources, different initial IL cation concentrations, and different hydroxyl radical sources
276
were used. Second, removal percentages and bimolecular reaction rate constants cannot be
277
compared directly without knowledge of the steady-state concentrations of hydroxyl rad-
278
icals, which have not been determined by Siedlecka and Stepnowski 33 or Stepnowski and
279
Zaleska 34 .
280
In addition to experiments with the model sensitizer H2 O2 , we performed a series of com-
281
petition experiments with C6 -imidazolium and benzoic acid in various solutions containing
282
DOM of different origins. Different distributions of C6 -imidazolium and benzoic acid can be
283
expected in solutions containing DOM because of the opposite charges of these molecules. IL
284
cations are permanently positively charged and have been shown to strongly associate with
285
the negatively charged moieties of DOM. 35,36 For benzoic acid, however, no interaction with
286
DOM is expected because at pH 7 benzoic acid is predominantly (99.8%) present as the nega-
287
tively charged benzoate. The formation mechanism of hydroxyl radicals in DOM-containing
288
waters is still incompletely understood, but DOM will act both as an important source and
289
the predominant scavenger of hydroxyl radicals. 29,37 Thus, unlike excited triplet states of
290
DOM and singlet oxygen, which are concentrated around DOM molecules, hydroxyl radicals
291
could be homogeneously distributed in DOM-containing solutions. As a result, identical
292
relative transformation rates of IL cations and benzoic acid in experiments with and without
293
DOM are an indication that indeed only reactions with hydroxyl radicals are relevant for
294
IL cations in DOM-containing solutions. As shown in Figure 4c, the relative transformation
295
rates of C6 -imidazolium and benzoic acid varied only minimally in experiments with H2 O2 ,
296
SRFA, Mississippi river water, and wastewater effluent. Likewise, no significant differences
297
were observed between experiments with H2 O2 and SRHA for all other IL cations except
298
for C8 -imidazolium (see Figures S5-10). ki,OH -values were, however, identical within error
299
(overlapping confidence intervals) in all experiments (see Table 1), even for C8 -imidazolium,
16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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300
suggesting that transformation of IL cations in natural sunlit surface waters are estimated
301
accurately from laboratory experiments with H2 O2 and average steady-state concentrations
302
of hydroxyl radicals. Table 1. Bimolecular reaction rate constants of IL cations with hydroxyl radicals in experiments with either H2 O2 or SRHA, ratios of pseudo-first order reaction rate constants from direct photolysis controls (kdir ) and experiments with SRHA (kSRHA ), and estimated half-lives in surface water. a
IL cation
ki,HO• (H2 O2 ) ki,HO• (SRHA) (109 M−1 s−1 )
kdir b kSRHA
T1/2 c
(%)
(days)
(109 M−1 s−1 )
C2 -imidazolium
2.57 ± 1.10
2.91 ± 0.52
13 ± 24
107 ± 46
C4 -imidazolium
3.98 ± 0.92
3.30 ± 1.70
7±6
69 ± 16
C6 -imidazolium
5.81 ± 0.94
6.30 ± 0.82 d
7±3
47 ± 8
C8 -imidazolium
8.05 ± 1.14
6.26 ± 1.31
19 ± 15
34 ± 5
C10 -imidazolium
8.47 ± 0.97
8.42 ± 1.29
10 ± 7
32 ± 4
C4 -pyridinium
2.04 ± 0.37
1.77 ± 0.60
19 ± 19
135 ± 25
C4 -pyrrolidinium
2.22 ± 0.77
124 ± 43
C4 -piperidinium
2.14 ± 0.96
129 ± 58
a
Errors are given as 95%-confidence intervals;
b
Rates are corrected for concentration changes in dark controls (see Figures S5-10);
c
Calculated from ki,HO• (H2 O2 ) assuming [OH]ss = 10−16 M and 7 hours of sunshine per day;
d
ki,HO• (SRFA) = 6.10 ± 0.95 · 109 M−1 s−1 , ki,HO• (SRNOM) = 6.05 ± 0.65 · 109 M−1 s−1 , ki,HO• (Mississippi river water) = 6.27 ± 0.87 · 109 M−1 s−1 ,
303
ki,HO• (wastewater effluent) = 6.71 ± 0.88 · 109 M−1 s−1
17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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304
Predicted fate of ionic liquid cations in sunlight surface water
305
We estimated the relative contribution of direct and indirect photochemical degradation of
306
imidazolium and pyridinium cations under environmental conditions from the comparison
307
of pseudo-first order reaction rate constants in experiments with SRHA and ultrapure water
308
kdir ) under simulated sunlight. Note that because of the slow direct photolysis of IL ( kSRHA
309
cations, the resulting relative contributions of direct photolysis to the overall photochemical
310
transformation are associated with large uncertainties (see Table 1). These values should
311
be considered as an upper limit because direct photolysis in DOM-containing waters will be
312
smaller than in ultrapure water due to light screening (see Figure 3b). All reaction rates
313
were corrected for changes in concentrations observed in dark controls, which were generally
314
negligible or slightly increasing over time likely due to evaporation of small amounts of
315
water. In the case of C8 - and C10 -imidazolium, however, concentrations decreased slightly
316
over time in dark controls (see Figures S9-10) indicating a slow thermal decay of the cations
317
caused by the elevated temperatures during irradiation experiments. Rate constants of
318
imidazolium cations in the presence of SRHA increased with the number of C atoms in
319
the side-chain as shown in Figure 5 in agreement with the fact that bimolecular reaction
320
rate constants of imidazolium cations with hydroxyl radicals increased accordingly. Rate
321
constants in ultrapure water, however, showed no relationship with the side-chain length and
322
the direct photolysis rate constant of C4 -pyridinium was within the range of the imidazolium
323
cations.
324
The relative importance of indirect photochemical processes, which is dominated by reac-
325
tions with hydroxyl radicals, was smallest for C8 -imidazolium (81 ± 15%) and C4 -pyridinium
326
(81 ± 19%) and largest for C4 - and C6 -imdazolium with 93 ± 6% and 93 ± 31%, respectively
327
(see Table 1). These results show that reactions with hydroxyl radicals dominate the fate
328
of IL cations in sunlit surface waters independent of side-chain length and ring structure.
329
Direct photochemical transformation of C4 -pyrrolidnium and C4 -piperidinium are expected
330
to be negligible due to a lack of absorption of these compounds at wavelengths above 200 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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331
nm (see Figure S1). Our findings are in contrast to results from Calza et al., 16,17 which indi-
332
cated that direct photolysis of C2 -imidazolium and C4 -pyridinium corresponds to 60 − 90%
333
and 20 − 90%, respectively, of the total photodegradation in surface waters. Direct pho-
334
tochemical transformation rates were very slow in both this and previous studies, which is
335
explained by the minimal overlap between the absorption spectra of imidazolium and pyri-
336
dinium cations with the solar emission spectrum. In fact, we could only observe absorption
337
of C2 -imidazolium between 290 and 400 nm when elevated concentrations (> 5 mM) were
338
used (see Figure S1). It should be noted, however, that molar absorption coefficients at 300
339
nm amounted only to approximately 1.0 M−1 cm−1 for C2 -imidazolium determined in this
340
study and 1.5 M−1 cm−1 for C4 -pyridinium determined by Calza et al. 17 . Slightly different
341
absorption spectra were observed for C2 -imidazolium in this study and by Calza et al. 16
342
but molar absorptivity is small in both cases and should not lead to drastically different
343
results. The fact that estimated contributions of direct photochemical transformation are
344
significantly different in this and previous studies is explained by the different experimental
345
approaches. Calza et al. 16,17 used a modeling approach to extrapolate direct and indirect
346
photochemical transformation rates determined in model experiments without DOM to envi-
347
ronmental conditions, which lead to the reported high contributions of direct photolysis. In
348
our study, however, transformation rates of IL cations in solutions with and without DOM
349
are compared under the same irradiation conditions, revealing the dominant contribution of
350
indirect photolysis for all tested IL cations.
351
Because the overlap between the absorption spectra of IL cations and the emittance
352
spectrum of the lamp in the solar simulator were very small, we refrained from determining
353
quantum yields for the tested IL cations. Instead, bimolecular reaction rate constants with
354
hydroxyl radicals were used to extrapolate our results to relevant environmental conditions.
355
Table 1 shows estimations of half-lives for all tested IL cations for sunlit surface waters
356
assuming a steady-state concentration of hydroxyl radicals of 1 · 10−16 M and an average
357
of 7 hours of daily sunshine. Steady-state hydroxyl radical concentrations in sunlit surface
19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
1.4 1.2
-1
k (days )
1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2
C4-pyridinium
C10-imidazolium
C8-imidazolium
C6-imidazolium
C4-imidazolium
C2-imidazolium
0.0
Figure 5. Pseudo-first order reaction rate constants of imidazolium and pyridinium cations in buffered SRHA solution (red striped bars) and ultrapure water (blue solid bars). Error bars are 95%-confidence intervals.
358
waters can vary substantially (10−17 − 10−15 M). 29,38 Our results should reflect an average
359
estimate of the half-lives in the photic zone of a surface water, but lower hydroxyl radical
360
concentrations would lead to (dramatically) longer half-lives. The fastest transformation
361
is expected for C10 -imidazolium with an estimated half-live of 32 ± 4 days (Table 1). C4 -
362
pyridinium, C4 -pyrrolidinium, and C4 -piperidinium are the most recalcitrant IL cations with
363
estimated half-lives between 124 ± 43 and 135 ± 25 days (Table 1). The estimated half-
364
life of C2 -imidazolium was 107 ± 46 days (see Table 1), which is significantly larger than
365
values determined by Calza et al. 16 (5 − 30 days). In their follow-up study, Calza et al. 17
366
have shown, however, that their modeled half-lives in surface water can vary drastically
367
depending on water depth, DOC concentrations, and type of DOM. The differences in half-
368
lives determined in this and previous studies are a consequence of the different experimental
369
and modeling approaches. Nevertheless, with half-lives on the order of days to months, a
370
common conclusion is reached that photochemical transformation of IL cations in surface
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waters will be slow compared to other organic contaminants.
372
The fact that IL cations are poorly or only slowly removed by both biological treatment
373
in wastewater treatment systems and photodegradation processes in sunlit surface waters
374
highlights the potential of these compounds to become persistent aquatic contaminants. If
375
the production volumes and usage of ILs by the chemical industry increase as predicted, care
376
should be taken to avoid release of IL cations into the environment.
377
Acknowledgement
378
This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (Early Postdoc.Mobility
379
fellowship 168888 to SGP) and the Joseph T. and Rose S. Ling Professorship (to WAA).
380
Thanks to Yousof Aly and Michael McCarty for their support with LC/MS analysis and
381
Meghan O’Connor for providing the wastewater effluent sample.
382
Supporting Information Available
383
Chemicals, organic matter isolates, natural water samples, and additional figures. This
384
information is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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385
386
387
388
389
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Graphical TOC Entry ionic liquids from wastewater
photochemical reactions with OH-radicals
HO
N
N
R
R
N N
HO
N
R
HO HO
HO
T1/2 > 30 days HO
R
486
27 ACS Paragon Plus Environment