Abstract

Determination of the analyte-specific distribution coefficient between the aqueous and sorbing phases is required for estimation of the aqueous-phase concentration of the analyte of interest using polymeric materials. Poly(dimethylsiloxane)-coated solid-phase microextration (PDMS-SPME) fiber-water partition coefficient (K(f)) values for eight common-use pyrethroids were determined using a two-compartment mass balance model and parameters determined in experimental seawater microcosms. Mass balance, epimerization, and aqueous-phase degradation (i.e., hydrolysis) were characterized using gas chromatography-negative chemical ionization mass spectrometry to facilitate K(f) estimation. Of the eight pyrethroids, only bifenthrin exhibited increasing sorption on the SPME fiber over the entire time-series exposure, indicating that its K(f) value could be estimated through a stable-compound model. The remaining pyrethroids were found to be unstable (half-life of <22 days), underscoring the importance of accounting for degradation in estimating K(f). The two-compartment model explained the experimental time-series data for bifenthrin (R(2) > 0.98) and the remaining unstable pyrethroids (R(2) > 0.7), leading to estimated values of log K(f) between 5.7 and 6.4, after correcting for residual dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the experimental seawater. These K(f) values can be used to determine freely dissolved pyrethroid concentrations in the pg/L range using PDMS-SPME in fresh or seawater matrices under equilibrium conditions in laboratory or field applications.

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