A flow-through passive dosing system for continuously supplying aqueous solutions of hydrophobic chemicals to bioconcentration and aquatic toxicity tests. Chemosphere 2011

Abstract

a b s t r a c t A continuous supply of water with defined stable concentrations of hydrophobic chemicals is a requirement in a range of laboratory tests such as the OECD 305 protocol for determining the bioconcentration factor in fish. Satisfying this requirement continues to be a challenge, particularly for hydrophobic chemicals. Here we present a novel solution based on equilibrium passive dosing. It employs a commercially available unit consisting of 16000polydimethylsiloxane(PDMS)tubesconnectedtotwomanifolds.Thechemicalsareloadedintotheunitbyrepeatedlyperfusingitwithamethanolsolutionofthesubstancesthatisprogressivelydilutedwithwater.Thereaftertheunitisperfusedwithwaterandthechemicalspartitionfromtheunitintothewater.ThesystemwastestedwithninechemicalswithlogKOWrangingfrom4.1to6.3.Theaqueousconcentrationsgeneratedwereshowntobelargelyindependentofthewaterflowrate,andtheunittounitreproducibilitywaswithinafactorof16 000 polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) tubes connected to two manifolds. The chemicals are loaded into the unit by repeatedly perfusing it with a methanol solution of the substances that is progressively diluted with water. Thereafter the unit is perfused with water and the chemicals partition from the unit into the water. The system was tested with nine chemicals with log K OW ranging from 4.1 to 6.3. The aqueous concentrations generated were shown to be largely independent of the water flow rate, and the unit to unit reproducibility was within a factor of 2. In continuous flow experiments the aqueous concentrations of most of the study chemicals remained constant over 8 d. A model was assembled that allows prediction of the operating characteristics of the system from the log K OW or PDMS/water partition coefficient of the chemical. The system is a simple, safe, predictable and flexible tool that generates stable aqueous concentrations of hydrophobic chemicals

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