Natural versus wastewater derived dissolved organic carbon: implications for the environmental fate of organic micropollutants |
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Authors: | Neale Peta A Antony Alice Gernjak Wolfgang Leslie Greg Escher Beate I |
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Affiliation: | a The University of Queensland, National Research Centre for Environmental Toxicology (Entox), Brisbane QLD 4108, Australia b UNESCO Centre for Membrane Science and Technology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW 2033, Australia c The University of Queensland, Advanced Water Management Centre (AWMC), Brisbane QLD 4072, Australia |
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Abstract: | The interaction of organic micropollutants with dissolved organic carbon (DOC) can influence their transport, degradation and bioavailability. While this has been well established for natural organic carbon, very little is known regarding the influence of DOC on the fate of micropollutants during wastewater treatment and water recycling. Dissolved organic carbon-water partition coefficients (KDOC) for wastewater derived and reference DOC were measured for a range of micropollutants using a depletion method with polydimethylsiloxane disks. For micropollutants with an octanol-water partition coefficient (log KOW) greater than 4 there was a significant difference in KDOC between reference and wastewater derived DOC, with partitioning to wastewater derived DOC over 1000 times lower for the most hydrophobic micropollutants. The interaction of nonylphenol with wastewater derived DOC from different stages of a wastewater and advanced water treatment train was studied, but little difference in KDOC was observed. Organic carbon characterisation revealed that reference and wastewater derived DOC had very different properties due to their different origins. Consequently, the reduced sorption capacity of wastewater derived DOC may be related to their microbial origin which led to reduced aromaticity and lower molecular weight. This study suggests that for hydrophobic micropollutants (log KOW > 4) a higher concentration of freely dissolved and thus bioavailable micropollutants is expected in the presence of wastewater derived DOC than predicted using KDOC values quantified using reference DOC. The implication is that naturally derived DOC may not be an appropriate surrogate for wastewater derived DOC as a matrix for assessing the fate of micropollutants in engineered systems. |
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Keywords: | Dissolved organic carbon Micropollutants Water recycling Partition coefficient |
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