Temporal chemical composition changes in water below a crude oil slick irradiated with natural sunlight. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Photooxidation can alter the environmental fate and effects of spilled oil. To better understand this process, oil slicks were generated on seawater mesocosms and exposed to sunlight for 8days. The molecular composition of seawater under irradiated and non-irradiated oil slicks was characterized using ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry and polyaromatic hydrocarbons analyses. Biomimetic extraction was performed to quantify neutral and ionized constituents. Results show that seawater underneath irradiated oil showed significantly higher amounts of hydrocarbons with oxygen- and sulfur-containing by-products peaking by day 4-6; however, concentrations of dissolved organic carbon were similar. Biomimetic extraction indicated toxic units in irradiated mesocosms increased, mainly due to ionized components, but remained <1, suggesting limited potential for ecotoxicity. Because the experimental design mimicked important aspects of natural conditions (freshly collected seawater, natural sunlight, and relevant oil thickness and concentrations), this study improves our understanding of the effects of photooxidation during a marine oil spill.

published proceedings

  • Mar Pollut Bull

altmetric score

  • 1.25

author list (cited authors)

  • Roman-Hubers, A. T., Aeppli, C., Dodds, J. N., Baker, E. S., McFarlin, K. M., Letinski, D. J., ... Rusyn, I.

citation count

  • 2

complete list of authors

  • Roman-Hubers, Alina T||Aeppli, Christoph||Dodds, James N||Baker, Erin S||McFarlin, Kelly M||Letinski, Daniel J||Zhao, Lin||Mitchell, Douglas A||Parkerton, Thomas F||Prince, Roger C||Nedwed, Tim||Rusyn, Ivan

publication date

  • December 2022