Skip To Content

TitleEffect of carboxylic acid content on the acute toxicity of oil sands : naphthenic acids
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsFrank, R. A., Fischer K., Kavanagh R., Burnison B. K., Arsenault G., Headley J. V., Peru K. M., Van Der Kraak G., & Solomon K. R.
Volume43
Issue2
Pagination266-271
PublisherEnvironmental Science and Technology
Publication Languageen
Abstract

Fractions of methylated naphthenic acids (NAs) isolated from oil sands process-affected waterwere collected utilizing Kugelrohr distillation and analyzed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy. 1H NMR analysis revealed that the ratio of methyl ester hydrogen atoms to remaining aliphatic hydrogen atoms increased from 0.130 to 0.214, from the lowest to the greatest molecular weight (MW) fractions, respectively, indicating that the carboxylic acid content increased with greater MW. Acute toxicity assays with exposure to monocarboxyl NA-like surrogates demonstrated that toxicity increased with increasing MW (D. magna LC50 values of 10 +/- 1.3 mM and 0.59 +/- 0.20 mM for the respective lowest and highest MW NA-like surrogates); however, with the addition of a second carboxylic acid moiety, the toxicity was significantly reduced (D. magna LC50 values of 10 +/- 1.3 mM and 27 +/- 2.2 mM forthe respective monocarboxyl and dicarboxyl NA-like surrogates of similar MW). Increased carboxylic acid content within NA structures of higher MW decreases hydrophobicity and, consequently, offers a plausible explanation as to why lower MW NAs in oil sands process-affected water are more toxic than the greater MW NAs. Read less

URLhttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/24036571_Effect_of_Carboxylic_Acid_Content_on_the_Acute_Toxicity_of_Oil_Sands_Naphthenic_Acids
Topics

Biology, Oil & Other Non-renewable Fuels

Locational Keywords

Athabasca Oil Sands

Active Link

http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317037869

Group

Science

Citation Key49385

Enter keywords or search terms and press Search

Search this site


Subscribe to the site

Syndicate content

Bookmark and Share