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Dive into the research topics where Christoph Moschet is active.

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Featured researches published by Christoph Moschet.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

How a Complete Pesticide Screening Changes the Assessment of Surface Water Quality

Christoph Moschet; Irene Wittmer; Jelena Simovic; Marion Junghans; Alessandro Piazzoli; Heinz Singer; Christian Stamm; Christian Leu; Juliane Hollender

A comprehensive assessment of pesticides in surface waters is challenging due to the large number of potential contaminants. Most scientific studies and routine monitoring programs include only 15-40 pesticides, which leads to error-prone interpretations. In the present study, an extensive analytical screening was carried out using liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry, covering 86% of all polar organic pesticides sold in Switzerland and applied to agricultural or urban land (in total 249 compounds), plus 134 transformation products; each of which could be quantified in the low ng/L range. Five medium-sized rivers, containing large areas of diverse crops and urban settlements within the respective catchments, were sampled between March and July 2012. More than 100 parent compounds and 40 transformation products were detected in total, between 30 and 50 parent compounds in each two-week composite sample in concentrations up to 1500 ng/L. The sum of pesticide concentrations was above 1000 ng/L in 78% of samples. The chronic environmental quality standard was exceeded for 19 single substances; using a mixture toxicity approach, exceedances occurred over the whole measurement period in all rivers. With scenario calculations including only 30-40 frequently measured pesticides, the number of detected substances and the mixture toxicity would be underestimated on average by a factor of 2. Thus, selecting a subset of substances to assess the surface water quality may be sufficient, but a comprehensive screening yields substantially more confidence.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Alleviating the reference standard dilemma using a systematic exact mass suspect screening approach with liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry.

Christoph Moschet; Alessandro Piazzoli; Heinz Singer; Juliane Hollender

In this study, the efficiency of a suspect screening strategy using liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) without the prior purchase of reference standards was systematically optimized and evaluated for assessing the exposure of rarely investigated pesticides and their transformation products (TPs) in 76 surface water samples. Water-soluble and readily ionizable (electrospray ionization) substances, 185 in total, were selected from a list of all insecticides and fungicides registered in Switzerland and their major TPs. Initially, a solid phase extraction-LC-HRMS method was established using 45 known, persistent, and high sales volume pesticides. Seventy percent of these target substances had limit of quantitation (LOQ) < 5 ng L(-1). This compound set was then used to develop and optimize a HRMS suspect screening method using only the exact mass as a priori information. Thresholds for blank subtraction, peak area, peak shape, signal-to-noise, and isotopic pattern were applied to automatically filter the initially picked peaks. The success rate was 70%; false negatives mainly resulted from low intense peaks. The optimized approach was applied to the remaining 140 substances. Nineteen additional substances were detected in environmental samples, two TPs for the first time in the environment. Sixteen substances were confirmed with reference standards purchased subsequently, while three TP standards could be obtained from industry or other laboratories. Overall, this screening approach was fast and very successful and can easily be expanded to other micropollutant classes for which reference standards are not readily accessible such as TPs of household chemicals.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Multi-Level Approach for the Integrated Assessment of Polar Organic Micropollutants in an International Lake Catchment: The Example of Lake Constance

Christoph Moschet; Christian W. Götz; Philipp Longrée; Juliane Hollender; Heinz Singer

Polar organic micropollutants (MPs) can have ecotoxicological effects on aquatic ecosystems and their occurrence in drinking water is a threat to public health. An extensive exposure assessment of MPs in large river and lake catchments is a necessary but challenging proposition for researchers and regulators. To get a complete picture of MP exposure in a large catchment, we employed a novel integrated strategy including MP measurement in the international catchment of Lake Constance and mass-flux modeling. A comprehensive screening of 252 MPs in the lake water by high-resolution mass spectrometry was used to identify the most commonly present MPs for the study site. It was found that the wastewater borne MPs diclofenac, carbamazepine, sulfamethoxazole, acesulfame, sucralose, benzotriazole, and methylbenzotriazole accounted for the most frequent and prominent findings. The concentration pattern of these compounds in the catchment was calculated based on regionalized inputs from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) and substance specific elimination rates. In 52, 8, and 3 of the 112 investigated river locations the concentration exceeded the predicted no-effect levels for diclofenac, sulfamethoxazole and carbamazepine, respectively. By coupling the catchment and lake model the effect of future trends in usage as well as possible mitigation options were evaluated for the tributaries and the lake. The upgrade of the major WWTPs in the catchment with a postozonation step would lead to a load reduction between 32% and 52% for all substances except for sucralose (10%).


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

LC- and GC-QTOF-MS as Complementary Tools for a Comprehensive Micropollutant Analysis in Aquatic Systems

Christoph Moschet; Bonny M. Lew; Simone Hasenbein; Tarun Anumol; Thomas M. Young

Efficient strategies are required to implement comprehensive suspect screening methods using high-resolution mass spectrometry within environmental monitoring campaigns. In this study, both liquid and gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QTOF-MS and GC-QTOF-MS) were used to screen for >5000 target and suspect compounds in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta in Northern California. LC-QTOF-MS data were acquired in All-Ions fragmentation mode in both positive and negative electrospray ionization (ESI). LC suspects were identified using two accurate mass LC-QTOF-MS/MS libraries containing pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and other environmental contaminants and a custom exact mass database with predicted transformation products (TPs). The additional fragment information from the All-Ions acquisition improved the confirmation of the compound identity, with a low false positive rate (9%). Overall, 25 targets, 73 suspects, and 5 TPs were detected. GC-QTOF-MS extracts were run in negative chemical ionization (NCI) for 21 targets (mainly pyrethroids) at sub-ng/L levels. For suspect screening, extracts were rerun in electron ionization (EI) mode with a retention time locked method using a GC-QTOF-MS pesticide library (containing exact mass fragments and retention times). Sixteen targets and 42 suspects were detected, of which 12 and 17, respectively, were not identified by LC-ESI-QTOF-MS. The results highlight the importance of analyzing water samples using multiple separation techniques and in multiple ionization modes to obtain a comprehensive chemical contaminant profile. The investigated river delta experiences significant pesticide inputs, leading to environmentally critical concentrations during rain events.


Chimia | 2014

Exploring the behaviour of emerging contaminants in the water cycle using the capabilities of high resolution mass spectrometry

Juliane Hollender; Marc Bourgin; Kathrin Fenner; Philipp Longrée; Christa S. McArdell; Christoph Moschet; Matthias Ruff; Emma L. Schymanski; Heinz Singer

To characterize a broad range of organic contaminants and their transformation products (TPs) as well as their loads, input pathways and fate in the water cycle, the Department of Environmental Chemistry (Uchem) at Eawag applies and develops high-performance liquid chromatography (LC) methods combined with high-resolution tandem mass spectrometry (HRMS/MS). In this article, the background and state-of-the-art of LC-HRMS/MS for detection of i) known targets, ii) suspected compounds like TPs, and iii) unknown emerging compounds are introduced briefly. Examples for each approach are taken from recent research projects conducted within the department. These include the detection of trace organic contaminants and their TPs in wastewater, pesticides and their TPs in surface water, identification of new TPs in laboratory degradation studies and ozonation experiments and finally the screening for unknown compounds in the catchment of the river Rhine.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Household Dust as a Repository of Chemical Accumulation: New Insights from a Comprehensive High-Resolution Mass Spectrometric Study

Christoph Moschet; Tarun Anumol; Bonny M. Lew; Deborah H. Bennett; Thomas M. Young

Chemical exposure in household dust poses potential risks to human health but has been studied incompletely thus far. Most analytical studies have focused on one or several compound classes, with analysis performed by either liquid or gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (LC-MS or GC-MS). However, a comprehensive investigation of individual dust samples is missing. The present study comprehensively characterizes chemicals in dust by applying a combination of target, suspect, and nontarget screening approaches using both LC and GC with quadrupole time-of-flight (Q/TOF) MS. First, the extraction method was optimized to streamline detection of LC-Q/TOF and GC-Q/TOF amenable compounds and was successfully validated with over 100 target compounds. Nontarget screening with GC-Q/TOF was done by spectral deconvolution followed by a library search. Suspect screening by LC-Q/TOF was carried out with an accurate mass spectral library. Finally, LC-Q/TOF nontarget screening was carried out by extracting molecular features, acquiring tandem mass spectrometric (MS/MS) spectra, and performing compound identification by use of in silico fragmentation software tools. In total, 271 chemicals could be detected in 38 dust samples, 163 of which could be unambiguously confirmed by a reference standard. Many of them, such as the plastic leachable 7,9-di- tert-butyl-1-oxaspiro(4,5)deca-6,9-diene-2,8-dione (CAS 82304-66-3) and three organofluorine compounds, are of emerging concern and their presence in dust has been underestimated. Advantages and drawbacks of the different approaches and analytical instruments are critically discussed.


Water Research | 2015

Evaluation of in-situ calibration of Chemcatcher passive samplers for 322 micropollutants in agricultural and urban affected rivers.

Christoph Moschet; Etienne Vermeirssen; Heinz Singer; Christian Stamm; Juliane Hollender


Water Research | 2014

Picogram per liter detections of pyrethroids and organophosphates in surface waters using passive sampling

Christoph Moschet; Etienne Vermeirssen; Remo Seiz; Hildegard Pfefferli; Juliane Hollender


Aqua &amp; Gas | 2014

Über 100 Pestizide in Fliessgewässern. Programm NAWA Spez zeigt die hohe Pestizidbelastung der Schweizer Fliessgewässer auf

Irene Wittmer; Christoph Moschet; Jelena Simovic; Heinz Singer; Christian Stamm; Juliane Hollender; Marion Junghans; Christian Leu


GWA Gas, Wasser, Abwasser | 2011

Organische Mikroverunreinigungen im Bodensee. Analyse und Bewertung der Situation in See und Einzugsgebiet

Philipp Longrée; Heinz Singer; Christoph Moschet; Christian W. Goetz; Michael Schärer; Mario Keusen

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Heinz Singer

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Juliane Hollender

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Christian Stamm

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Irene Wittmer

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Christian Leu

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Marion Junghans

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Philipp Longrée

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Etienne Vermeirssen

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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