1. Academic Validation
  2. Reaction kinetics and mechanisms of organosilicon fungicide flusilazole with sulfate and hydroxyl radicals

Reaction kinetics and mechanisms of organosilicon fungicide flusilazole with sulfate and hydroxyl radicals

  • Chemosphere. 2018 Jan;190:327-336. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.09.134.
D Fabio Mercado 1 Larisa L B Bracco 1 Antonio Arques 2 Mónica C Gonzalez 1 Paula Caregnato 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicadas (INIFTA), CCT-La Plata-CONICET, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Casilla de Correo 16, Sucursal 4, 1900, La Plata, Argentina.
  • 2 Grupo de Procesos de Oxidación Avanzada, Departamento de Ingeniería Textil y Papelera, Universitat Politècnica de València, Campus de Alcoy, Plaza Ferrandiz y Carbonell s/n, 03801, Alcoy, Spain.
  • 3 Instituto de Investigaciones Fisicoquímicas Teóricas y Aplicadas (INIFTA), CCT-La Plata-CONICET, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Casilla de Correo 16, Sucursal 4, 1900, La Plata, Argentina. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

Flusilazole is an organosilane fungicide used for treatments in agriculture and horticulture for control of diseases. The reaction kinetics and mechanism of flusilazole with sulfate and hydroxyl radicals were studied. The rate constant of the radicals with the fungicide were determined by laser flash photolysis of peroxodisulfate and hydrogen peroxide. The results were 2.0 × 109 s-1M-1 for the reaction of the fungicide with HO and 4.6 × 108 s-1 M-1 for the same reaction with SO4- radicals. The absorption spectra of organic intermediates detected by laser flash photolysis of S2O82- with flusilazole, were identified as α-aminoalkyl and siloxyl radicals and agree very well with those estimated employing the time-dependent density functional theory with explicit account for bulk solvent effects. In the continuous photolysis experiments, performed by photo-Fenton reaction of the fungicide, the main degradation products were: (bis(4-fluorophenyl)-hydroxy-methylsilane) and the non-toxic silicic acid, diethyl bis(trimethylsilyl) ester, in ten and twenty minutes of reaction, respectively.

Keywords

Degradation mechanism; Flusilazole; Fungicide degradation; Hydroxyl radical; Photo-fenton; Sulfate radical.

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