Registration Dossier

Data platform availability banner - registered substances factsheets

Please be aware that this old REACH registration data factsheet is no longer maintained; it remains frozen as of 19th May 2023.

The new ECHA CHEM database has been released by ECHA, and it now contains all REACH registration data. There are more details on the transition of ECHA's published data to ECHA CHEM here.

Diss Factsheets

Environmental fate & pathways

Adsorption / desorption

Currently viewing:

Administrative data

Link to relevant study record(s)

Reference
Endpoint:
adsorption / desorption, other
Remarks:
other: sediment water partition coefficient
Type of information:
migrated information: read-across based on grouping of substances (category approach)
Adequacy of study:
key study
Reliability:
2 (reliable with restrictions)
Rationale for reliability incl. deficiencies:
comparable to guideline study with acceptable restrictions
Remarks:
Study well documented, includes study protocol; meets generally accepted scientific principles, acceptable for assessment.
Principles of method if other than guideline:
TEST DETAILS: 10 g of sediment were placed in a sample bottle, along with 800 ml test solution at concentrations of 0.05, 0.10, 1.0 and 5.0 ppm in purified water or synthetic hard water. The sample bottles were then shaken by hand and allowed to settle for 30 minutes.  The solution temperature and pH was then measured and the pH adjusted to 6-8 where necessary. Aliquots were removed for Day 0 analysis and the bottles then placed on a shaker at 100 cycles/minute. The pH of the solutions was readjusted on sample days where necessary. Test concentrations are equivalent to 40, 80, 800 and 4000 ug Dequest 2001 (active acid) respectively.
GLP compliance:
no
Type of method:
other: other measurement
Media:
other: water - sediment
Radiolabelling:
yes
Analytical monitoring:
yes
Type:
Koc
Value:
16 610 L/kg
Type:
log Koc
Value:
4.22 dimensionless
Key result
Sample No.:
#1
Phase system:
sediment-water
Type:
Kp
Value:
>= 830 - <= 7 900 L/kg
Matrix:
Sediment with overlying soft water
Remarks on result:
other: Values across a range of test substance concentrations after 1-8 days equilibration.
Sample No.:
#2
Phase system:
sediment-water
Type:
Kp
Value:
>= 680 - <= 2 700 L/kg
Matrix:
Sediment with overlying hard water
Remarks on result:
other: Values across a range of test substance concentrations after 1-8 days equilibration.

ANALYSIS: Analysis was performed on days 0, 1, 2, 4 and 8. The concentration of the test substance in water was determined by liquid scintillation counting. The concentration in sediment was then calculated by difference, based on the assumption that any reduction in water concentration was due to adsorption to sediment. Due to the high level of adsorption significant change in aqueous concentration occurred, and therefore analysis of the soil was not essential.

K(sediment-water) values are expressed in litres/kilogram for soft water

Day 0

Day 1

Day 2

Day 4

Day 8

0.05 ppm

360

920

3900

1300

1900

0.10 ppm

490

1100

2300

1500

1900

1.0 ppm

74

940

1000

1500

1900

5.0 ppm

460

2400

830

5600

7900

K(sediment-water) values are expressed in litres/kilogram for hard water

Day 0

Day 1

Day 2

Day 4

Day 8

0.05 ppm

360

1300

1300

1900

1900

0.10 ppm

420

1100

1500

1900

2300

1.0 ppm

140

1200

1500

2700

2000

5.0 ppm

57

680

1100

1800

1800


The 5.0 ppm test concentration may not have reached equilibrium over the test period due to saturation of some
of the sediment adsorption sites. Therefore, a mean value applicable to soft water is 1900 l/kg, and to hard water,
2000 l/kg.

Conclusions:
A Log Koc value of 4.22 was determined in a reliable study conducted according to generally accepted scientific principles.

Description of key information

The substance adsorbs significantly to sediment, soil and sludge substrates based on the available study data. While the binding is not necessarily to organic carbon, Kd values appear consistent with a log Koc (equivalent) value of approximately 4.2.

Key value for chemical safety assessment

Koc at 20 °C:
40 000

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in sediment)
Value in L/kg:
3.3
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in soil)
Value in L/kg:
2.9
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in activated sewage sludge)
Value in L/kg:
4.18
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in raw sewage sludge)
Value in L/kg:
4.08
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in settled sewage sludge)
Value in L/kg:
4.08
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in effluent sewage sludge)
Value in L/kg:
4.18
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Other adsorption coefficients

Type:
log Kp (solids-water in suspended matter)
Value in L/kg:
3.3
at the temperature of:
12 °C

Additional information

This substance is a mineral-binding and complexing agent, with unusual chemical properties. HEDP and its salts adsorb strongly to inorganic surfaces, soils and sediments, in model systems and mesocosms, despite the very low log Kow; this has implications for the approach to environmental fate modelling. High adsorption is consistent with similar behaviour seen for structural analogues, and other common complexing agents such as EDTA.

 

Studies on analogous phosphonate complexing agents have revealed that adsorption is correlated with concentration in the aqueous phase and also relates significantly to the type and nature of inorganic content in the substrate.

 

The normal approach to modelling binding behaviour in environmental exposure assessment assumes that the substance is binding only to the organic carbon present in soils, sediments, and WWTP sludges. This assumption does not apply to HEDP and its salts. The extent of binding to substrates is fundamental to understanding and modelling of environmental exposure, for substances like this. Therefore, adsorption / desorption data, required in Section 9.3.1 of Annex IX, is an extremely important part of the data set for HEDP and its salts.

 

The nature of the adsorption is believed to be primarily due to interaction with inorganic substrate or generalised surface interactions. While Kocis the conventional indicator for adsorption, the interaction with organic carbon present in the substrate may be exceeded by these other interactions in the case of HEDP and its salts, meaning that Kocas such is not a meaningful parameter.It is convenient for comparison purposes to determine the value of log Kocthat is consistent/equivalent to the degree of sediment or soil binding exhibited by the substance.

 

Thus, a log Koc(equivalent) value of 4.22 was obtained by evaluating Kp(sediment-water)data in a reliable study conducted according to generally accepted scientific principles (Michael, 1979). River sediments were analysed by using liquid scintillation on day 0, 1, 2, 4, 8. Methods and sample data were represented clearly and the test substance was being described adequately. The result is considered as reliable and has been assigned as key study.

 

From other various sources, an adsorption coefficient value of 0.91-0.98 is reported in reviewed literature paper (Steber and Wierich, 1987). The Freundlich isotherm constants values of ca. 2600-13000 for HEDP were determined by following the EPA test guide method in an activated sludge. A paper (Jaworska, 2002) supported the measured data for water sediment and water active sludge studies. Another study (Nowack, 2002) has reported the same phenomena using active sludge as testing medium.

 

Adsorption data for soils were derived in an OECD 106 study using radiochemical analysis (Springborn Laboratories, undated) and further values are reported in literature (Steber and Wierich, 1987). The adsorption values determined (Kd~10 - ~200 l/kg in both tests) are consistent with a log Koc(equivalent) value of 3.8-4.7 from the silty soils and 2.8 from the sands, consistent with the log Koc(equivalent) derived from the key sediment study. In further studies (Nowack and Stone1999), goethite (an iron-based mineral commonly found in soil) was used as a testing substrate. High levels of adsorption were reported. A study by Fischer (1991) resulted in Freundlich constants 50 – 2400 for relevant soil minerals.

 

A screening study using the conventional HPLC method (OECD 121) to estimate the value of Koc(organic carbon-water partition coefficient) is considered not appropriate. Adsorption behaviour onto the normal aminopropyl column used in OECD 121 would not necessarily follow the pattern of adsorption onto substrates that are of importance in the environment. Understanding of sludge binding is informative, but much less significant in the chemical safety assessment than binding to matrices with a higher inorganic content or high surface area. It is important to understand Kddirectly, and preferably as a function of variables such as solid phase composition and characteristics, water hardness, dilutions, and phase ratios.

 

[LogKoc: 4.6]