Langmuir, Vol.24, No.8, 3955-3959, 2008
Thermodynamics of adsorption of imidacloprid at constant charge hydrophobic surfaces: Physicochemical aspects of bioenvironmental activity
Adsorption of the insecticide 1-(6-chloro-3-pyridylmethyl)-N-nitroimidazolidin-2-ylideneamine (Imidacloprid) on the hanging mercury drop electrode (HMDE) surface was studied by temperature-dependent stripping voltammetry (TD-SV). At near physiological pH, Under reducing conditions, the Gibbs free energy of adsorption, Delta G(ADS.) shows two distinct temperature-dependent regimes. (a) At 0 degrees < T < 10 degrees C a temperature-independent mechanism occurs with a constant Delta G(ADS) = -40.5 kJ/mol, resulting in strong chemisorption at high surface coverage. For T < 10 degrees C a considerable enthalpy gain is estimated, and this represents the driving force for the adsorption of Imidacloprid onto the electrode Surface. (b) At T > 10 degrees C a temperature-dependent mechanism is operative with Delta G(ADS)/Delta T = -91.4 J/K mol, resulting in a rapid weakening of adsorption and low surface coverage. On the basis of the present findings we suggest that the strong chemisorption at T < 10 degrees C at physiological pH under reducing conditions is related to the high specific insecticide activity of Imidacloprid in cool-blooded insects as contrasted to its low efficiency in warm-blooded organisms.