Abstract

Pesticides are useful products for agriculture and human life, but they are often released into surface waters and are hazardous to aquatic ecosystems. Pesticides monitoring in surface waters is challenging due to the great variety, ultratrace levels and nonpoint source pollution of pesticides; however, continuous passive sampling may be conducive to solving these problems. This work evaluated the performance of a newly developed passive sampler (hydrophilic–lipophilic balance sorbent-embedded cellulose acetate membrane, HECAM) for six types of currently used/present pesticides. The uptake kinetics and equilibrium partitioning of nineteen pesticides in different dissolved concentrations were studied by dynamic accumulation and equilibrium partitioning experiments, respectively. In the dynamic accumulation experiments, pesticides gradually accumulated in the HECAM and followed a first-order kinetic model. The same type of pesticides had roughly comparable accumulation concentrations. The estimated uptake rate constants ranged from 1.04 to 13.5 L g−1 d−1, and sampling rates ranged from 0.02 to 0.31 L d−1 for the pesticides in the HECAM (size of 2 cm × 3 cm). Pesticide accumulation concentrations in the HECAM increased linearly with increasing dissolved concentrations, which means that varying concentrations can also be monitored by the HECAM. In the equilibrium partitioning experiments, the pesticide partitioning behavior at varying dissolved concentrations can be described by the Freundlich model. The calculated equilibrium partition coefficients (log KD) for pesticides ranged from 3.32 to 4.54, and different pesticide types showed different changes with log Kow. Comparable results were found when estimating chemical equilibrium partition coefficients by the dynamic accumulation and equilibrium partitioning methods. Field deployment of the HECAM in river waters resulted in the detection of four pesticides, and the measured results were comparable to those of active sampling coupled with liquid–liquid extraction. These results suggest that the HECAM would be a promising strategy for simultaneously monitoring diverse pesticides in waters.

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