Litcius/Paper detail

Evaluations of Weathering of Polar and Nonpolar Petroleum Components in a Simulated Freshwater–Oil Spill by Orbitrap and Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry

Chukwuemeka Ajaero, Ian J. Vander Meulen, Nicole E. Heshka, Qin Xin, Dena W. McMartin, Kerry M. Peru, Huan Chen, Amy M. McKenna, Kiaura Reed, John V. Headley

2024Energy & Fuels11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The comprehensive chemical characterization of crude oil is important for the evaluation of the transformation and fate of components in the environment. Molecular-level speciation of naphthenic acid fraction compounds (NAFCs) was investigated in a mesoscale spill tank using both negative-ion electrospray ionization (ESI) Orbitrap mass spectrometry (MS) and positive-ion atmospheric pressure photoionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (APPI-FT-ICR-MS). Both ionization techniques are coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometric detectors (ESI: Orbitrap MS; APPI: FT-ICR-MS at 9.4 T), enabling insight into the behavior and fate of petrogenic compounds during a simulated freshwater crude oil spill. Negative-ion ESI Orbitrap-MS reveals that oxygen-containing (O x ) classes are detected early in the spill, whereby species with more oxygen per molecule evolve later in the simulated spill. The O 2 -containing species gradually decreased in relative abundance, while O 3 and O 4 species increased in relative abundance throughout the simulated spill, which could correspond to a relative degree of oxygen incorporation. Nonpolar speciation by positive-ion APPI 9.4 T FT-ICR-MS allowed for the identification of water-soluble nonpolar and less polar acidic species. Molecular-level graphical representation of elemental compositions derived from simulated spill water-soluble and oil-soluble species suggest that biological activity is the primary degradation mechanism and that biodegradation was the dominant mechanism based on the negative-ion ESI Orbitrap-MS results.

Topics & Concepts

OrbitrapFourier transform ion cyclotron resonanceChemistryMass spectrometryElectrospray ionizationEnvironmental chemistryAnalytical Chemistry (journal)ChromatographyPetroleum Processing and AnalysisHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysisOil Spill Detection and Mitigation