posted on 2014-07-15, 00:00authored byElizabeth
D. Wagner, Jennifer Osiol, William A. Mitch, Michael J. Plewa
Amine-based
CO2 capture is a prime contender for the
first full-scale implementation of CO2 capture at fossil
fuel-fired power plants postcombustion. However, the formation of
potentially carcinogenic N-nitrosamines and N-nitramines from reactions of flue gas NOx with the amines presents a potential risk for contaminating
airsheds and drinking water supplies. Setting regulatory emission
limits is hampered by the dearth of toxicity information for the N-nitramines. This study employed quantitative in
vitro bioassays for mutagenicity in Salmonella
typhimurium, and chronic cytotoxicity and acute genotoxicity
in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells to compare the toxicity of analogous N-nitrosamines and N-nitramines relevant
to CO2 capture. Although the rank order was similar for
genotoxicity in CHO cells and mutagenicity in S. typhimurium, the Salmonella assay was far more
sensitive. In general, mutagenicity was higher with S9 hepatic microsomal
activation. The rank order of mutagenicity was N-nitrosodimethylamine
(NDMA) > N-nitrosomorpholine > N-nitrodimethylamine >1,4-dinitrosopiperazine > N-nitromorpholine >1,4-dinitropiperazine > N-nitromonoethanolamine
> N-nitrosodiethanolamine > N-nitrodiethanolamine.
1-Nitrosopiperazine and 1-nitropiperazine were not mutagenic. Overall, N-nitrosamines were ∼15-fold more mutagenic than
their N-nitramine analogues.