Organophosphate esters (OPEs) have become one group of chemicals with emerging concern in the marine environment. In this work, we investigated OPEs in the air and seawater of the South China Sea in summer 2019. The concentrations of ∑OPEs in the atmosphere ranged from 66 to 550 pg/m, with TCIPP, TNBP, TPhP, and TEP predominating in the air. The total dissolved OPE concentrations (∑OPEs without TEP) measured in high-volume water samples ranged from 300 to 3600 pg/L, with a mean concentration of 1180 ± 910 pg/L. TEP was measured with liquid-liquid extraction (LLE), and it showed the highest concentration (average 2000 ± 1450 pg/L) among the selected OPEs. Total suspended matter associated OPEs accounted for less than 4.7% of the sum of OPE concentrations in seawater. Fugacity fractions and air-sea exchange fluxes showed that TCEP, TCIPP, TIBP, TEHP, TPhP, and EHDPP were favored to volatilize, TEP dominated the deposition, while TPrP and TNBP varied between volatilization and deposition. Atmospheric particle deposition fluxes ranged from 5 to 71 ng/m/day with an average of 17 ± 15 ng/m/day. The input of ∑OPEs to the entire South China Sea via atmospheric particle deposition was estimated to be 22 ± 19 tons/year, while the net air-sea exchange fluxes of OPEs were volatilization from seawater to air with an average of 44 ± 33 tons/year. This work suggests that air-sea exchange and atmospheric particle deposition are significant processes interfering with the transport of OPEs in the marine environment.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/envhealth.3c00059 | DOI Listing |
The oceans play a pivotal role in mitigating climate change by sequestering approximately 25% of annually emitted carbon dioxide (CO). High-latitude oceans, especially the Arctic continental shelves, emerge as crucial CO sinks due to their cold, low saline, and highly productive ecosystems. However, these heterogeneous regions remain inadequately understood, hindering accurate assessments of their carbon dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS ES T Water
November 2024
Department of Chemistry, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30606, United States.
Surfactants are amphiphilic molecules that adsorb to interfaces and affect the interfacial tension. Surfactants in seawater can impact gas-exchange, surface properties, and the composition and fate of sea spray aerosol. The accurate quantification of surfactants and their classes is crucial to constraining the effect of surfactants in seawater and their role in air-sea exchanges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ R Soc Interface
November 2024
Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg, Oldenburg, DE, Germany.
Ocean waves are significantly damped by biogenic surfactants, which accumulate at the sea surface in every ocean basin. The growth, development, and breaking of short wind-driven surface waves are key mediators of the air-sea exchange of momentum, heat and trace gases. The mechanisms through which surfactants suppress waves have been studied in great detail through careful laboratory experimentation in quasi-one-dimensional wave tanks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2024
Group of Applied Physics and Institute for Environmental Sciences, University of Geneva, 66 Bd Carl-Vogt, Geneva 4, 1211, Switzerland.
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