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Influence of rhamnolipids and triton X-100 on the desorption of pesticides from soils
Authors:Mata-Sandoval Juan C  Karns Jeffrey  Torrents Alba
Affiliation:Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Maryland at College Park, 20742, USA.
Abstract:A rhamnolipid biosurfactant mixture produced by P. aeruginosa UG2 and the surfactant Triton X-100 were tested for their effectiveness of enhancing the desorption of trifluralin, atrazine, and coumaphos from soils. Sorption of both surfactants by the soils was significant and adequately described by the Langmuir-type isotherm. Values of maximum sorption capacity (Qmax) and Langmuir constant (Klang) did not correlate with the amount of soil organic matter. Our results indicate that clay surfaces play an important role in the sorption of surfactants. When surfactant dosages were high enough to reach soil saturation and maintain an aqueous micellar phase, pesticide desorption was only enhanced. At dosages below soil saturation, surfactants sorbed onto soil, increasing its hydrophobicity and enhancing the sorption of the pesticides by a factor of 2. Similar values of water-soil partition coefficients (Ksol*) for aged and fresh added pesticides to soils indicate that the aging process used did not significantly after the capability of either surfactant to desorb the pesticides. A model able to estimate equilibrium distributions of organic compounds in soil-aqueous-micellar systems was tested against experimental results. The determined organic carbon partition coefficients, Koc values, indicate that, on a carbon normalized basis, sorbed Rh-mix is a much better sorbent of pesticides than TX-100 or soil organic matter. These results have significant implications on determining the effectiveness of surfactants to aid soil remediation technologies.
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