Dichloroacetonitrile and
Dichloroacetamide Can Form
Independently during Chlorination and Chloramination of Drinking Waters,
Model Organic Matters, and Wastewater Effluents
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
The increasing usage of organic nitrogen-rich wastewater-
or algal-impacted
waters, and chloramines for secondary disinfection, raises concerns
regarding the formation of haloacetonitriles, haloacetamides and other
nitrogenous disinfection byproducts (N-DBPs). Previous research obtained
contradictory results regarding the relative importance of chlorination
or chloramination for promoting these byproducts, but applied chlorine
and chloramines at different doses and exposure periods. Additionally,
mechanistic work, mostly using model precursors, suggested that haloacetonitrile
and haloacetamide formation should be correlated because hydrolysis
of haloacetonitriles forms haloacetamides. In this work, the formation
of dichloroacetonitrile (DCAN) and dichloroacetamide (DCAcAm) were
compared across a range of chlorine and chloramine exposures for drinking
waters, wastewater effluents, algal extracellular polymeric substances
(EPS), NOM isolates and model precursors. While chlorination favored
formation of DCAN over DCAcAm, chloramination nearly always formed
more DCAcAm than DCAN, suggesting the existence of haloacetamide formation
pathways that are independent of the hydrolysis of haloacetonitriles.
Experiments with asparagine as a model precursor also suggested DCAcAm
formation without a DCAN intermediate. Application of <sup>15</sup>N-labeled monochloramine indicated initial rapid formation of both
DCAN and DCAcAm by pathways where the nitrogen originated from organic
nitrogen precursors. However, slower formation occurred by pathways
involving chloramine incorporation into organic precursors. While
wastewater effluents and algal EPS tended to be more potent precursors
for DCAN during chlorination, humic materials were more potent precursors
for DCAcAm during chlorination and for both DCAN and DCAcAm during
chloramination. These results suggest that, rather than considering
haloacetamides as haloacetonitrile hydrolysis products, they should
be treated as a separate N-DBP class associated with chloramination.
While use of impaired waters may promote DCAN formation during chlorination,
use of chloramines may promote haloacetamide formation for a wider
array of waters