Aerobic Biodegradation of a Nonylphenol Polyethoxylate and Toxicity of the Biodegradation Metabolites
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Núñez Olea, JosefaEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2009-09Referencia bibliográfica
Jurado, E., Fernández-Serrano, M., Núñez-Olea, J., & Lechuga, M. (2009). Aerobic biodegradation of a nonylphenol polyethoxylate and toxicity of the biodegradation metabolites. Bulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology, 83, 307-312.
Resumen
In this paper a study was made of the biodegradation
of a non-ionic surfactant, a nonylphenol
polyethoxylate, in biodegradability tests by monitoring the
residual surfactant matter. The influence of the concentration
on the extent of primary biodegradation, the toxicity of
biodegradation metabolites, and the kinetics of degradation
were also determined. The primary biodegradation was
studied at different initial concentrations: 5, 25 and 50 mg/
L, (at sub-and supra-critical micelle concentration). The
NPEO used in this study can be considered biodegradable
since the primary biodegradation had already taken place (a
biodegradation greater than 80% was found for the different
initial concentration tested). The initial
concentration affected the shape of the resulting curve, the
mean biodegradation rate and the percentage of biodegradation
reached (99% in less than 8 days at 5 mg/L, 98% in
less than 13 days at 25 mg/L and 95% in 14 days at 50 mg/
L). The kinetic model of Quiroga and Sales (1991) was
applied to predict the biodegradation of the NPEO. The
toxicity value was measured as EC20 and EC50. In addition,
during the biodegradation process of the surfactant a toxicity
analysis was made of the evolution of metabolites
generated, confirming that the subproducts of the biodegradation
process were more toxic than the original.