3.6.2. Assessing available concentrations of organic chemicals

Author: Jose Julio Ortega-Calvo

Reviewers: John Parsons, Gerard Cornelissen

 

Learning objectives:

You should be able to:

 

Keywords: Bioavailability, Freely-dissolved concentration, Desorption, Passive sampling, Infinite sink

 

Introduction: Bioavailability through the water phase

In many exposure scenarios involving organic chemicals, ranging from a bacterial cell to a fish, or from a sediment bed to a soil profile, the organisms experience the pollution through the water phase. Even when this is not the case, for example when uptake is from sediment consumed as food, the aqueous concentration may be a good indicator of the bioavailable concentration, since ultimately a chemical equilibrium will be established between the solid phase, the aqueous phase (possibly in the intestine), and the organism. Thus, taking an aqueous sample from a given environment, and determining the concentration of a certain chemical with the appropriate analytical equipment seems a straightforward approach to assess bioavailability. However, especially for hydrophobic chemicals, which tend to remain sorbed to solid surfaces (see sections on Relevant chemical properties and Sorption of organic chemicals), the determination of the chemicals present in the aqueous phase, as a way to assess bioavailability, has represented a significant challenge to environmental organic chemistry. The phase exchange among different compartments often leads to equilibrium aqueous concentrations that are very low, because most of the chemicals remain associated to the solids, and after sustained exposure, to the biota. These freely dissolved concentrations (Cfree) are very useful to determine bioavailability, as they represent the “tip of the iceberg” under equilibrium exposure, and are what organisms “see” (Figure 1, left). Similarly to the balance between gravity and buoyancy forces leading to iceberg flotation up to a certain level, Cfree  is determined by the equilibrium between sorption and desorption, and connected to the concentration of the sorbed chemical (Csorbed) through a partitioning coefficient.

Biological uptake may also result in the fast removal of the chemical from the aqueous phase, and thus in further desorption from the solids, so equilibrium is never achieved, and actual aqueous concentrations are much lower than the equilibrium Cfree (or even close to zero). In these situations, bioavailability is driven by the desorption kinetics of the chemical. Usually, desorption occurs as a biphasic process, where a fast desorption phase, occurring during a few hours or days, is followed by a much slower phase, taking months or even years. Therefore, for scenarios involving rapid exposures, or for studies on coupled desorption/biodegradation, the fast-desorbing fraction of the chemicals (Ffast) can be used to determine bioavailability. This fraction is often referred to as the bioaccessible fraction. Following the iceberg analogy (Figure 1, right), Ffast would constitute the upper iceberg fraction rapidly melting by sun irradiation, with a very minimal “visible” surface (representing the desorbed chemical in the aqueous solution, which is quickly removed by biological uptake).  The slowly desorbing –or melting- fraction, Fslow, would remain in the sorbed state, within a given time span, having little interactions with the biota.

 

Figure 1. The magnitude of Cfree, determined by the sorption/desorption equilibrium (similarly to a floating iceberg, left), can correspond to a minimal fraction of the total pollutant mass, but may constitute the main driver for bioavailability (and risk) in equilibrium exposure scenarios. In non-equilibrium conditions (right, in analogy, a melting iceberg exposed to irradiation to sun), the fraction of sorbed chemical that can be rapidly mobilized, Ffast, can be taken as an estimate of bioavailability.

 

Determining bioavailability with passive sampling methods

Cfree can be determined with a passive sampler, in the form of polymer-coated fibers or sheets (membranes) made of a variety of polymers, which establish an additional sorption equilibrium with the aqueous phase in contact with the soil or sediment (Jonker et al., 2018). Depending on the analytes of interest, different polymers, such as polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) or polyethylene (PE), are used in passive samplers. The passive sampler, enriched in the analyte (similarly to the floating iceberg in Figure 1, left, where Csorbed in this case is the concentration in the passive sampler), can be used in this way to determine indirectly the pollutant concentration present in the aqueous phase, even at very low concentrations, though the appropriate distribution ratio between sampler and water. In bioavailability estimations, passive sampling is designed for equilibrium and non-depletive conditions. This means that the amount of chemical sampled does not alter the solid-water equilibrium, i.e., it is essential that Cfree is not affected significantly by the sampler. Equilibrium achievement is critical, and it may take days or weeks.

Cfree can be calculated from the concentration of the pollutant in the passive sample polymer at equilibrium (Cp), and the polymer-to-water partitioning coefficient (Kpw):

Cfree values can be the basis of predictions for bioaccumulation that use the equilibrium partitioning approach, either directly or through a bioconcentration factor, and for sediment toxicity in conjunction with actual toxicity tests. Passive sampling methods are well suited for contaminated sediments, and they have already been implemented in regulatory environmental assessments based on bioavailability (Burkhard et al., 2017).

 

Determining bioavailability with desorption extraction methods

The determination of Ffast can be achieved with the use of methods that trap the desorbed chemical once it appears in the aqueous phase. Far from equilibrium conditions, desorption is driven to its maximum rate by placing a material in the aqueous phase that acts as an infinite sink (comparable to the sun irradiation of a melting iceberg in Figure 1, right). The most accepted materials for these desorption extraction methods are Tenax, a sorptive resin, and cyclodextrin, a solubilizing agent (ISO, 2018). These methods allow a permanent aqueous chemical concentration of almost zero, and therefore, sorption of the chemical back to the soil or sediment can be neglected. Several extraction steps can be used, covering a variable time span, which depends on the environmental sample.

The following first-order, two-compartment kinetic model  can be used to analyze desorption extraction data:

In this equation, St and So (mg) are the soil-sorbed amounts of the chemical at time t (h) and at the start of the experiment, respectively. Ffast and Fslow are the fast- and slow-desorbing fractions, and kfast and kslow (h-1) are the rate constants of fast and slow desorption, respectively. To calculate the values of the different constants and fractions (Ffast, Fslow, kfast, and kslow) exponential curve fitting can be used. The ln form of the equation can be used to simplify curve fitting.

Once the desorption kinetics are known, the method can be simplified for a series of samples, by using single time point-extractions. A time period of 20 h has been suggested as a sufficient time period to approximate Ffast. It is highly convenient for operational reasons (ISO, 2018), but indicative at best, since the time needed to extract Ffast tends to vary between chemicals and soils/sediments.

 

References

Burkhard, L.P., Mount, D.,R., Burgess, R.,M. (2017). Developing Sediment Remediation Goals at Superfund Sites Based on Pore Water for the Protection of Benthic Organisms from Direct Toxicity to Nonionic Organic Contaminants EPA/600/R 15/289; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Research and Development: Washington, DC.

ISO (2018). Technical Committee ISO/TC 190 Soil quality — Environmental availability of non-polar organic compounds — Determination of the potentially bioavailable fraction and the non-bioavailable fraction using a strong adsorbent or complexing agent; International Organization for Standardization: Geneva, Switzerland.

Jonker, M.T.O., van der Heijden, S.A., Adelman, D., Apell, J.N., Burgess, R.M., Choi, Y., Fernandez, L.A., Flavetta, G.M., Ghosh, U., Gschwend, P.M., Hale, S.E., Jalalizadeh, M., Khairy, M., Lampi, M.A., Lao, W., Lohmann, R., Lydy, M.J., Maruya, K.A., Nutile, S.,A., Oen, A.M.P., Rakowska, M.I., Reible, D., Rusina, T.P., Smedes, F., Wu, Y. (2018) Advancing the use of passive sampling in risk assessment and management of sediments contaminated with hydrophobic organic chemicals: results of an international ex situ passive sampling interlaboratory comparison. Environmental Science & Technology 52 (6), 3574-3582.