Tamás Csay
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tamás Csay.
Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2015
Gyuri Sági; Tamás Csay; László Szabó; György Pátzay; Emil Csonka; Erzsébet Takács; László Wojnárovits
By combining a large variety of analytical techniques this study aimed at elaborating methods to follow up the degradation of sulfonamides in an advanced oxidation process (AOP): irradiation with ionizing radiation in dilute aqueous solution. In this process, besides other radicals, hydroxyl radicals are produced. As pulse radiolysis experiments show the basic initial reaction is hydroxyl radical addition to the benzene ring, forming cyclohexadienyl radical intermediates. In aerated solutions these radicals transform to peroxy radicals. Among the first formed products aromatic molecules hydroxylated in the benzene rings or in some cases in the heterocyclic rings were observed by LC-MS/MS. Chemical oxygen demand (COD) measurements indicate that at the early reaction period of degradation one hydroxyl radical induces incorporation of 1.5 O atoms into the products. Comparison of the COD and TOC (total organic carbon content) results shows gradual oxidation. Simultaneously with hydroxylation ring opening also takes place. The kinetics of inorganic SO4(2-) and NH4(+) formation, analyzed by ion chromatography, is similar to the kinetics of ring degradation (UV spectroscopy), however, there is a delayed formation of NO3(-). The latter ions may be produced in oxidative degradation of smaller N containing fragments. The S atoms of the sulfonamides remain in the solution (ICP-MS measurements) after degradation, whereas some part of the N atoms leaves the solution probably in the form of N2 (total nitrogen content (TN) measurements). Degradation is accompanied by a high pH drop due to formation of SO4(2-), NO3(-) and smaller organic acids. The degradation goes through many simultaneous and consecutive reactions, and with the applied methods the different stages of degradation can be characterized.
Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2008
József Kaizer; Tamás Csay; Péter Kővári; Gábor Speier; László Párkányi
Radiation Physics and Chemistry | 2012
Tamás Csay; Gergely Rácz; Erzsébet Takács; László Wojnárovits
Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2006
József Kaizer; Éva Balogh-Hergovich; Miklos Czaun; Tamás Csay; Gábor Speier
Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2010
József Kaizer; Tamás Csay; Gábor Speier; Michel Giorgi
Inorganic Chemistry Communications | 2006
József Kaizer; Tamás Csay; Gábor Speier; Marius Réglier; Michel Giorgi
Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Tünde Váradi; József S. Pap; Michel Giorgi; László Párkányi; Tamás Csay; Gábor Speier; József Kaizer
Inorganic Chemistry Communications | 2010
Tamás Csay; Balázs Kripli; Michel Giorgi; József Kaizer; Gábor Speier
Radiation Physics and Chemistry | 2016
Gyuri Sági; Krisztina Kovács; Anikó Bezsenyi; Tamás Csay; Erzsébet Takács; László Wojnárovits
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2014
Gyuri Sági; Tamás Csay; György Pátzay; Emil Csonka; László Wojnárovits; Erzsébet Takács