Abstract

Chemical accidents have frequently occurred in South Korea as a result of the huge amount of chemicals being used in various industries. Even though fire accidents accounted for 71.9% of chemical accidents during 2008–2018 in South Korea, most ecological research and investigation has focused on leakage accidents since most fire or explosion gases are diffused out and disappear into the atmosphere. In this study, the possibility of soil contamination by toluene combustion is proposed. A fire simulation batch test was performed and identified the combustion by-products such as methylbenzene, ethylbenzene, ethynylbenzene, benzaldehyde, 1-phenyl-1-propyne, naphthalene, 2-methylindene using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC–MS). Naphthyl-2-methyl-succinic acid, a metabolic intermediate of naphthalene metabolism derived from the combustion product of toluene, was also discovered in field soil and the secondary metabolites such as streptomycin 6-phosphate, 3-Nitroacrylate, oxaloacetate using LC–MS. Moreover, Streptomyces scabiei, participating in naphthalene metabolism, was also discovered in filed soil (contaminated soil) using 16s rRNA sequencing. As a result, bacterial stress responses in field soil (contaminated soil) affected by gas cloud were identified by discovering metabolites relating to bacterial self-defense action such as fatty biosynthesis. This study draws a conclusion that soil can be polluted enough to affect bacteria by gas cloud and soil bacteria and can encounter stress for a long term even though toluene and its combustion products had already decomposed in soil.

Highlights

  • Chemical accidents have occurred in South Korea consequent to the huge amount of chemicals used in various industries [1]

  • A simulation test for toluene combustion was conducted in order to identify combustion products formed in a gas cloud and the compounds polluting the ground soil, using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC–MS)

  • This study proposed the possibility of soil contamination by gas cloud when a chemical fire accident occurs

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Summary

Introduction

Chemical accidents have occurred in South Korea consequent to the huge amount of chemicals used in various industries [1]. This might be due to a preconception that most fire or explosion gases tend to diffuse out and disappear into the atmosphere or photo-decomposed by ultra-violet of the sun [3,4,5], while chemical leakage can lead to contamination of the soil with a high concentration It is questionable whether the chemical and its combustion by-product in the gas cloud, generated from a fire and explosion, affect the soil bacterial community and its metabolites for a long term since the chemical accident had occurred. There have been theoretical and computational calculations to expect the expected combustion products of toluene [10], but this study performed the batch experiment to increase the reproducibility of actual fire accidents

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