Calculating the aquatic toxicity of hydrocarbon mixtures

Abstract For acute toxicity to aquatic organisms, individual hydrocarbons are equally toxic on the basis of their internal molar concentration within the organism. The differences in measured toxicities among hydrocarbons lies with differences in their equilibrium partitioning behavior between water and the organism. For complex hydrocarbon mixtures, an additional complication of partitioning between the bulk hydrocarbon and the water is encountered. Equations are developed for calculating the water concentration of components of complex hydrocarbon mixtures. Using gasoline as an example, a method is presented for first calculating the concentration of gasoline components in water after equilibration with different gasoline volumes and then, the component toxicities are used to estimate the gasoline volume causing 50% mortality to aquatic organisms.