New insights into the environmental photochemistry of common-use antibiotics in ice and in water : A comparison of kinetics and influencing factors

Ge, Linke and Wang, Siyuan and Halsall, Crispin and Li, Xuanyan and Bai, Dongxiao and Cao, Shengkai and Zhang, Peng (2024) New insights into the environmental photochemistry of common-use antibiotics in ice and in water : A comparison of kinetics and influencing factors. Emerging Contaminants, 10 (4): 100382. ISSN 2405-6650

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Abstract

The photochemistry of organic contaminants present in ice is receiving growing attention, given the wide presence of ice during winter in temperate regions as well as Polar and mountain environments. Differences between ice photochemistry and aqueous photochemistry, however, influence the quantitative fate and transformation of organic chemicals present in freshwater, marine and ice-cap environments and these differences need to be explored. Here we comparatively studied the ice and aqueous photochemistry of three antibiotics [levofloxacin (LVX), sulfamerazine (SM), and chlortetracycline (CTC)] under the same simulated sunlight (λ > 290 nm). Their photodegradation in ice/water followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, whereby the photolytic rates of LVX in ice and water were found to be similar, SM photodegraded faster in ice, while CTC underwent slower photodegradation in ice. Whether individual antibiotics underwent faster photodegradation in ice or not depends on the specific concentration effect and cage effect coexisting in the ice compartment. In most cases, the fastest photodegradation occurred in freshwater ice or in fresh water, and the slowest photolysis occurred in pure-water ice or in pure water. This can be attributed to the effects of key photochemical reactive constituents of Cl-, HA, NO3 - and Fe(III), that exist in natural waters. These constituents at certain levels showed significant effects (P < 0.1) on the photolysis, not only in ice but also in water. However, these individual constituents at a given concentration, serve to either enhance or suppress the photoreaction, depending on the specific antibiotic and the matrix type (e.g., ice or aqueous solution). Furthermore, extrapolation of the laboratory findings to cold environments indicate that pharmaceuticals present in ice will have a different photofate compared to water. These results are of particular relevance for those regions that experience seasonal ice cover in fresh water and coastal marine systems.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Emerging Contaminants
ID Code:
221921
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
12 Jul 2024 13:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
16 Jul 2024 01:22