Most cited article - PubMed ID 26423076
Nanostructured Metal Oxides for Stoichiometric Degradation of Chemical Warfare Agents
Regenerated bead cellulose is a promising material with excellent mechanical and rheological properties, ideally suited for advanced environmental applications. By introducing the amidoxime functional group into the glucose unit at the C-6 position, highly effective reactive sorbent was prepared and used to destroy priority hazardous substances such as organophosphate pesticides or nerve-paralytic chemical warfare agents (CWAs). Quantum mechanical (QM) calculations were performed to study the interactions of organophosphates with amidoxime functional groups at the molecular level. It was found that the energetic reaction barrier of the rate-limiting step is markedly reduced (from 31.40 to 11.37 kcal mol-1) in the case of the amidoxime-catalysed degradation of parathion methyl, which resulted in a dramatic increase in the degradation rate; this was fully confirmed by experiments, in which the pesticide degradation proceeded at the time scale of several hours (t 1/2 = 20-30 hours at pH 7.22).
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
INTRODUCTION: Macrocrystalline oxides of alkaline earth metals (Mg and Ca) or light metals (Al and Ti) can respond to standard warfare agents such as sulfur mustard, soman, or agent VX. In this paper, we compared the decontamination ability of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and sodium hypochlorite (NaClO) for nitrogen mustards (cyclophosphamide [CP] and ifosfamide [IFOS]) with a new procedure using a destructive sorbent based on nanocrystalline and nanodispersive titanium dioxide (TiO2) as a new efficient and cheap material for complete decontamination of surfaces. METHODS: Titanium (IV) dioxide nanoparticles were prepared by the homogeneous hydrolysis of titanium(IV) oxysulfate (TiOSO4) with urea. The as-prepared TiO2 nanoparticles were used for the fast and safe decontamination of cytostatics from the nitrogen mustard family (CP and IFOS) in water. The adsorption-degradation process of cytostatics in the presence of TiO2 was compared with decontamination agents (0.01 M solution of sodium hydroxide and 5% solution of sodium hypochlorite). The mechanism of the decontamination process and the degradation efficiency were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry. RESULTS: It was demonstrated that a 0.01 M solution of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) decomposes CP to 3-((amino(bis(2-chloroethyl)amino)phosphoryl)oxy)propanoic acid and sodium hypochlorite formed two reaction products, namely, IFOS and 4-hydroxy-cyclophosphamide. IFOS is cytotoxic, and 4-hydroxy-cyclophosphamide is a known metabolite of CP after its partial metabolism by CYP/CYP450. IFOS degrades in the pres¬ence of NaOH to toxic IFOS mustard. Titanium(IV) dioxide nanoparticles adsorbed on its surface CP after 5 minutes and on IFOS after 10 minutes. The adsorption-degradation process of CP in water and in the presence of TiO2 led to 4-hydroxy-cyclophosphamide and IFOS, respectively, which decayed to oxidation product 4-hydroxy-ifosfamide. CONCLUSION: Nanodispersive TiO2 is an effective degradation agent for decontamination of surfaces from cytostatics in medical facilities.
- Keywords
- cyclophosphamide, decontamination agents, degradation, ifosfamide, ifosfamide mustard, titanium(IV) dioxide,
- MeSH
- Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating chemistry metabolism MeSH
- Cyclophosphamide chemistry metabolism MeSH
- Cytostatic Agents chemistry metabolism MeSH
- Decontamination methods MeSH
- Ifosfamide chemistry metabolism MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Nanoparticles chemistry MeSH
- Titanium chemistry MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating MeSH
- Cyclophosphamide MeSH
- Cytostatic Agents MeSH
- Ifosfamide MeSH
- Titanium MeSH
- titanium dioxide MeSH Browser