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A Light Touch: Solar Photocatalysis Detoxifies Oil Sands Process-Affected Waters Prior to Significant Treatment of Naphthenic Acids

Timothy M. C. Leshuk, Zachary W. Young, Brad Wilson, Zi Qi Chen, Danielle A. Smith, Greg Lazaris, Mary Gopanchuk, Sean McLay, Corin A. Seelemann, Theo Paradis,Asfaw Bekele, Rodney Guest, Hafez Massara, Todd White,Warren Zubot,Daniel J. Letinski,Aaron D. Redman,D. Grant Allen,Frank Gu

ACS ES&T WATER(2024)

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Abstract
Environmental reclamation of Canada's oil sands tailings ponds is among the single largest water treatment challenges globally. The toxicity of oil sands process-affected water (OSPW) has been associated with its dissolved organics, a complex mixture of naphthenic acid fraction components (NAFCs). Here, we evaluated solar treatment with buoyant photocatalysts (BPCs) as a passive advanced oxidation process (P-AOP) for OSPW remediation. Photocatalysis fully degraded naphthenic acids (NAs) and acid extractable organics (AEO) in 3 different OSPW samples. However, classical NAs and AEO, traditionally considered among the principal toxicants in OSPW, were not correlated with OSPW toxicity herein. Instead, nontarget petroleomic analysis revealed that low-polarity organosulfur compounds, composing <10% of the total AEO, apparently accounted for the majority of waters' toxicity to fish, as described by a model of tissue partitioning. These findings have implications for OSPW release, for which a less extensive but more selective treatment may be required than previously expected.
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Key words
photocatalysis,toxicology,passive treatment,oil sands,naphthenic acids,target lipid model,biomimetic extraction,exposomics,petroleomics
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