- Chlorination of chlortoluron: kinetics, pathways and chloroform formation.
Chlorination of chlortoluron: kinetics, pathways and chloroform formation.
Chlortoluron chlorination is studied in the pH range of 3-10 at 25 ± 1°C. The chlorination kinetics can be well described by a second-order kinetics model, first-order in chlorine and first-order in chlortoluron. The apparent rate constants were determined and found to be minimum at pH 6, maximum at pH 3 and medium at alkaline conditions. The rate constant of each predominant elementary reactions (i.e., the acid-catalyzed reaction of chlortoluron with HOCl, the reaction of chlortoluron with HOCl and the reaction of chlortoluron with OCl(-)) was calculated as 3.12 (± 0.10)×10(7)M(-2)h(-1), 3.11 (±0.39)×10(2)M(-1)h(-1) and 3.06 (±0.47)×10(3)M(-1)h(-1), respectively. The main chlortoluron chlorination by-products were identified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) with purge-and-trap pretreatment, ultra-performance liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-MS and GC-electron capture detector. Six volatile disinfection by-products were identified including chloroform (CF), dichloroacetonitrile, 1,1-dichloropropanone, 1,1,1-trichloropropanone, dichloronitromethane and trichloronitromethane. Degradation pathways of chlortoluron chlorination were then proposed. High concentrations of CF were generated during chlortoluron chlorination, with maximum CF yield at circumneutral pH range in solution.