Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • The degradation behaviour of nine diverse contaminants in urban surface water and wastewater prior to water treatment.

The degradation behaviour of nine diverse contaminants in urban surface water and wastewater prior to water treatment.

Environmental science. Processes & impacts (2015-11-14)
Guillaume Cormier, Benoit Barbeau, Hans Peter H Arp, Sébastien Sauvé
ABSTRACT

An increasing diversity of emerging contaminants are entering urban surface water and wastewater, posing unknown risks for the environment. One of the main contemporary challenges in ensuring water quality is to design efficient strategies for minimizing such risks. As a first step in such strategies, it is important to establish the fate and degradation behavior of contaminants prior to any engineered secondary water treatment. Such information is relevant for assessing treatment solutions by simple storage, or to assess the impacts of contaminant spreading in the absence of water treatment, such as during times of flooding or in areas of poor infrastructure. Therefore in this study we examined the degradation behavior of a broad array of water contaminants in actual urban surface water and wastewater, in the presence and absence of naturally occurring bacteria and at two temperatures. The chemicals included caffeine, sulfamethoxazole, carbamazepine, atrazine, 17β-estradiol, ethinylestradiol, diclofenac, desethylatrazine and norethindrone. Little information on the degradation behavior of these pollutants in actual influent wastewater exist, nor in general in water for desethylatrazine (a transformation product of atrazine) and the synthetic hormone norethindrone. Investigations were done in aerobic conditions, in the absence of sunlight. The results suggest that all chemicals except estradiol are stable in urban surface water, and in waste water neither abiotic nor biological degradation in the absence of sunlight contribute significantly to the disappearance of desethylatrazine, atrazine, carbamazepine and diclofenac. Biological degradation in wastewater was effective at transforming norethindrone, 17β-estradiol, ethinylestradiol, caffeine and sulfamethoxazole, with measured degradation rate constants k and half-lives ranging respectively from 0.0082-0.52 d(-1) and 1.3-85 days. The obtained degradation data generally followed a pseudo-first-order-kinetic model. This information can be used to model degradation prior to water treatment.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, suitable for NMR (reference standard)
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, purification grade, 99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, anhydrous, 99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) sulfate, anhydrous, powder, ≥99.99% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, puriss. p.a., ACS reagent, reag. ISO, reag. Ph. Eur., ≥99.8% (GC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, puriss., meets analytical specification of Ph Eur, ≥99.7% (GC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, BioReagent, ≥99.93%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, ACS reagent, ≥99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, ACS reagent, ≥99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) sulfate, puriss. p.a., anhydrous, ≥99.0% (RT)
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, ACS reagent, ≥99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, ACS spectrophotometric grade, ≥99.9%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, Laboratory Reagent, ≥99.6%
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) sulfate, puriss., meets analytical specification of Ph. Eur., BP, USP, anhydrous, 99-100.5% (based on anhydrous substance)
Sigma-Aldrich
Copper(II) sulfate, ReagentPlus®, ≥99%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol solution, suitable for NMR (reference standard), 4% in methanol-d4 (99.8 atom % D), NMR tube size 3 mm × 8 in.
Sigma-Aldrich
Formic acid, ≥95%, FCC, FG
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol solution, contains 0.50 % (v/v) triethylamine
Sigma-Aldrich
Formic acid, ACS reagent, ≥96%