Environ Toxicol Chem
February 2021
The species sensitivity distribution (SSD) is a statistical approach that is used to estimate either the concentration of a chemical that is hazardous to no more than x% of all species (the HCx) or the proportion of species potentially affected by a given concentration of a chemical. Despite a significant body of published research and critical reviews over the past 20 yr aimed at improving the methodology, the fundamentals remain unchanged. Although there have been some recent suggestions for improvements to SSD methods in the literature, in general, few of these suggestions have been formally adopted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Toxicol Chem
January 2020
Many metals (aluminum, cadmium, cobalt, copper, nickel, lead, zinc) are widely studied environmental contaminants because of their ubiquity, potential toxicity to aquatic life, and tendency for toxicity to vary widely as a function of water chemistry. The interactions between metal and water chemistry influence metal "bioavailability," an index of the rate and extent to which the metal reaches the site of toxic action. The implications of metal bioavailability for ecological risk assessment are large, with as much as a 100-fold variability across a range of water chemistries in surface waters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGood water quality for livestock is essential for animal health, supply of safe food and food production economy. Few countries have established water quality criteria for livestock for chemical contaminants. For those that have them, the values are quite variable among each other for the same substance due to differences in the approach for the acceptable daily intakes and algorithms for the calculation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Canada, perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) have been the focus of several monitoring programs and research and surveillance studies. Here, we integrate recent data and perform a multi-media assessment to examine the current status and ongoing trends of PFAAs in Canada. Concentrations of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), perfluorooctanoate (PFOA), and other long-chain perfluorocarboxylates (PFCAs) in air, water, sediment, fish, and birds across Canada are generally related to urbanization, with elevated concentrations observed around cities, especially in southern Ontario.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Environ Assess Manag
January 2011
The objective of this work is to present a critical review of the application of the tissue residue approach (TRA) in ecological risk and/or impact assessment (ERA) of chemical stressors and environmental criteria development. A secondary goal is to develop a framework for integrating the TRA into ecological assessments along with traditional, exposure concentration-based assessment approaches. Although widely recognized for its toxicological appeal, the utility of the TRA in specific applications will depend on numerous factors, such as chemical properties, exposure characteristics, assessment type, availability of tissue residue-response data, and ability to quantify chemical exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem B
July 2009
Proton transfer in protonated Nafion fuel cell membranes is studied using several pyrene derivative photoacids. Proton transfer in the center of the Nafion nanoscopic water channels is probed with the highly charged photoacid 8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonate (HPTS). At high hydration levels, both the time-integrated fluorescence spectrum and the fluorescence kinetics of HPTS permit the determination of hydronium concentration of the interior of the water pools in Nafion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe charge redistribution upon photoexcitation is investigated for a series of pyrene photoacids to better understand the driving force behind excited-state proton-transfer processes. The changes in electric dipole for the lowest two electronic transitions ( (1)L b and (1)L a) are measured by Stark spectroscopy, and the magnitudes of charge transfer of the protonated and deprotonated states are compared. For neutral photoacids studied here, the results show that the amount of charge transfer depends more upon the electronic state that is excited than the protonation state.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
February 2008
A series of pyrene photoacids is used to investigate excited-state proton transfer with time-dependent pump-probe spectroscopy. The deprotonation dynamics of a cationic photoacid, 8-aminopyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid trisodium salt (APTS), shows single exponential dynamics( approximately 30 ps) in water. This is in contrast to what is observed for the neutral photoacids 8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid trisodium salt (HPTS) and 8-hydroxy-N,N,N',N',N",N"-hexamethylpyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonamide, which display biexponential dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dynamics of water and its effect on proton transport kinetics in Nafion membranes are compared at several hydration levels. Nafion is the most widely used polyelectrolyte membrane in fuel cells. Ultrafast infrared spectroscopy of the O-D stretch of dilute HOD in H2O provides a probe of the local environment and hydrogen bond network dynamics of water confined in the hydrophilic regions of Nafion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
November 2007
The photoacid 8-hydroxy-N,N,N',N',N',N'-hexamethylpyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonamide (HPTA) and related compounds are used to investigate the steps involved in excited-state deprotonation in polar solvents using pump-probe spectroscopy and time correlated single photon counting fluorescence spectroscopy. The dynamics show a clear two-step process leading to excited-state proton transfer. The first step after electronic excitation is charge redistribution occurring on a tens of picoseconds time scale followed by proton transfer on a nanosecond time scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
November 2007
The dynamics of water confined in two different types of reverse micelles are studied using ultrafast infrared pump-probe spectroscopy of the hydroxyl OD stretch of HOD in H2O. Reverse micelles of the surfactant Aerosol-OT (ionic head group) in isooctane and the surfactant Igepal CO 520 (nonionic head group) in 50/50 wt % cyclohexane/hexane are prepared to have the same diameter water nanopools. Measurements of the IR spectra and vibrational lifetimes show that the identity of the surfactant head groups affects the local environment experienced by the water molecules inside the reverse micelles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe properties of confined water and diffusive proton-transfer kinetics in the nanoscopic water channels of Nafion fuel cell membranes at various hydration levels are compared to water in a series of well-characterized AOT reverse micelles with known water nanopool sizes using the photoacid pyranine as a molecular probe. The side chains of Nafion are terminated by sulfonate groups with sodium counterions that are arrayed along the water channels. AOT has sulfonate head groups with sodium counterions that form the interface with the reverse micelle's water nanopool.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe short and intermediate time scale dynamics of the photoacid pyranine (1-hydroxy-3,6,8-pyrenetrisulfonic acid, commonly referred to as HPTS) are studied with visible pump-probe spectroscopy in various solvents to elucidate the nature of its proton-transfer kinetics in water. The observed time dependences of HPTS are compared with those of the methoxy derivative, MPTS. A global fitting procedure is employed to model both the spectral shift (Stokes shift) caused by solvent reorganization and deprotonation of pyranine in water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe spectroscopic locations of the 1La and 1Lb electronic states of pyranine (1-hydroxy-3,6,8-pyrenetrisulfonic acid, commonly referred to as HPTS), as well as several related compounds, are found using magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy as well as absorption and fluorescence spectroscopies. These electronic states have been discussed in connection with the photoacid properties of HPTS. Polarization selective fluorescence spectroscopy is used to identify the transition dipole directions of the electronic states of the compounds studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA core/shell model has often been used to describe water confined to the interior of reverse micelles. The validity of this model for water encapsulated in AOT/isooctane reverse micelles ranging in diameter from 1.7 to 28 nm (w0 = 2-60) and bulk water is investigated using four experimental observables: the hydroxyl stretch absorption spectra, vibrational population relaxation times, orientational relaxation rates, and spectral diffusion dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a theoretical study of superfluidity in CH(4)-doped para-H(2) nanoclusters. Path integral simulations for clusters of 12-16 H(2) around a single CH(4) molecule were carried out at temperatures between 0.5 and 2 K to study the superfluid response of the cluster.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn intestinal proton-dependent peptide transporter located on the lumenal surface of the enterocyte is responsible for the uptake of many orally absorbed beta-lactam antibiotics. Both cephalexin and loracarbef are transported by this mechanism into the human intestinal Caco-2 cell line. Forty-seven analogs of the carbacephalosporin loracarbef and the cephalosporin cephalexin were prepared to evaluate the structural features necessary for uptake by this transport carrier.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFish in low-alkalinity lakes having pH of 6.0-6.5 or less often have higher body or tissue burdens of mercury, cadmium, and lead than do fish in nearby lakes with higher pH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of C(3)-cyclopropyl cephems and carbacephems has been prepared by palladium catalyzed addition of diazomethane to the corresponding C(3)-vinyl derivatives. The phenylglycyl cyclopropyl cephem derivatives exhibit better Gram-positive activity than cephalexin or cefaclor, while the aminothiazole oxime cyclopropyl cephem derivatives were not as active as the corresponding C(3)-vinyl cephems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol C Comp Pharmacol Toxicol
November 1987
1. The zinc and copper concentration of plasma was determined in rainbow trout, lake trout, walleye and whitefish. 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new cepham metabolite has been isolated from the filtered broth of Cephalosporium acremonium by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and identified as 7 beta-(5-D-amino-adipamido)-3 beta-hydroxy-3 alpha-methyl-cepham-4 alpha-carboxylic acid (I). Pure penicillin N was prepared using HPLC in the analytical mode. When I was added in place of penicillin N as substrate for the cell-free biosynthetic of cephalosporin, no formation of deacetoxycephalosporin C (II) was observed.
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