Enhancement of oil forensic methodology through the addition of polycyclic aromatic nitrogen heterocycle biomarkers for diagnostic ratios

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-023-10941-3

Language of the publication
English
Date
2023-02-20
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • McCallum, Paige
  • Filewood, Taylor
  • Sawitsky, Julia
  • Kwok, Honoria
  • Brunswick, Pamela
  • Yan, Jeffrey
  • Chibwe, Leah
  • Tikkisetty, Krishnaja
  • Shang, Dayue
Publisher
Springer Nature

Abstract

Current oil spill forensic identification of source oils relies upon hydrocarbon biomarkers resistant to weathering. This international technique was developed by the European Committee for Standardization (CEN), under EN 15522–2 Oil Spill Identification guidelines. The number of biomarkers have expanded at pace with technological advances, while distinguishing new biomarkers becomes more challenging due to interference of isobaric compounds, matrix effects, and high cost of weathering experiments. Application of high-resolution mass spectrometry enabled exploration of potential polycyclic aromatic nitrogen heterocycle (PANH) oil biomarkers. The instrumentation showed reduction in isobaric and matrix interferences, allowing for identification of low-level PANH and alkylated PANHs (APANHs). Weathered oil samples, obtained from a marine microcosm weathering experiment, enabled comparison with source oils to identify new, stable forensic biomarkers. This study highlighted eight new APANH diagnostic ratios that expanded the biomarker suite, increasing the confidence for identifying highly weathered oils back to their source oil.

Subject

  • Oil spills,
  • Forensics,
  • Identification

Rights

Pagination

13 pages

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
1573-2959

Article

Journal title
Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
Journal volume
195
Article number
416
Accepted date
2023-01-12
Submitted date
2022-11-23

URI

Collection(s)

Water

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