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Vrana B, Schuurmann G: Calibrating the uptake kinetics of semipermeable membrane devices in water: impact of hydrodynamics. Environ Sci Technol. 2002 Jan 15;36(2):290-6. The use of lipid-containing semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs) is becoming commonplace, but the potential effects of environmental variables affecting the accumulation of contaminants into SPMDs had not been characterized sufficiently, yet. To characterize the effect of hydrodynamic conditions on the contaminant uptake kinetics, accumulation of pentachlorobenzene, hexachlorobenzene, and hexachlorocyclohexane isomers from water into SPMD was studied at various water flow rates. The accumulation kinetics of hydrophobic compounds (log Kow > 4) are governed by the aqueous boundary layer in linear flow velocity range from 0.06 to 0.28 cm s (-1) and sensitive to slight changes in flow rate. The effect of flow velocity on the exchange kinetics increases with increasing hydrophobicity. Under faster, but still laminar flow conditions (0.28-1.14 cm s (-1)), the sensitivity to changes in flow decreases to a nonsignificant level for the substances under consideration. The results of this study confirm that the use of the laboratory-derived calibration data for estimation of analyte concentrations in the ambient environment is limited unless flow-sensitive performance reference compounds are used. |
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