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Organic chloramines in drinking water: An assessment of formation, stability, reactivity and risk
Authors
Armesto
Armesto
+39 more
Berne
Bond
Bull
Chinn
Conyers
Cynthia A. Joll
Deborde
Dotson
Ellis
Englert
Flecks
Francesco Busetti
Freuze
Gottardi
Hand
Hosako
How
How
Hui
Hunter
Hureiki
Isaac
Kathryn L. Linge
Kulcharyk
Laingam
Liew
Morris
Na
Nweke
Pero
Pitman
Richardson
Scully
Shang
Snyder
Thurman
White
Yoon
Zuo Tong How
Publication date
1 January 2016
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd. Although organic chloramines are known to form during the disinfection of drinking water with chlorine, little information is currently available on their occurrence or toxicity. In a recent in vitro study, some organic chloramines (e.g. N-chloroglycine) were found to be cytotoxic and genotoxic even at micromolar concentrations. In this paper, the formation and stability of 21 different organic chloramines, from chlorination of simple amines and amino acids, were studied, and the competition between 20 amino acids during chlorination was also investigated. For comparison, chlorination of two amides was also conducted. The formation and degradation of selected organic chloramines were measured using either direct UV spectroscopic or colorimetric detection. Although cysteine, methionine and tryptophan were the most reactive amino acids towards chlorination, they did not form organic chloramines at the chlorine to precursor molar ratios that were tested. Only 6 out of the 21 organic chloramines formed had a half-life of more than 3 h, although this group included all organic chloramines formed from amines. A health risk assessment relating stability and reactivity data from this study to toxicity and precursor abundance data from the literature indicated that only N-chloroglycine is likely to be of concern due to its stability, toxicity and abundance in water. However, given the stability of organic chloramines formed from amines, more information about the toxicity and precursor abundance for these chloramines is desirable
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oai:espace.curtin.edu.au:20.50...
Last time updated on 18/04/2019
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1016%2Fj.watres.20...
Last time updated on 31/10/2020